The genetic portrait emerging from seven Pericú-associated individuals provides a preliminary but intriguing picture. Of the male Y-chromosome calls, haplogroup Q appears in four individuals, consistent with a major paternal lineage across Native American populations. One sample is assigned to haplogroup P; given the small dataset and potential coverage limitations, this may reflect a deep ancestral lineage or ambiguous resolution between related paternal branches. On the maternal side, mitochondrial haplogroups B (three individuals), C (two), and CZ (two) are reported. Haplogroups B and C are widespread in the Americas and align with patterns seen in many precontact Mexican and western North American populations; the CZ designation indicates either C or Z affinity when resolution is limited.
These results are compatible with archaeological signals of long-term regional continuity, but the sample count is fewer than ten, so interpretations must remain cautious. The distribution of maternal and paternal lineages could reflect local continuity, sex-biased mobility, or episodic contacts with neighboring groups. Low sample numbers, variable preservation, and potential temporal mixing across the 3000 BCE–1700 CE span mean that demographic models are provisional. Expanded, well-dated sampling and collaboration with descendant communities are essential to test hypotheses about population continuity, migration, and social organization in the Pericú world.