Ancient DNA extracted from one individual at Pica Ocho yielded a maternal haplogroup A2 and a paternal haplogroup Q. Both lineages are well‑documented across the Americas: mtDNA A2 is widespread among Native American populations and often associated with deep regional continuity, while Y‑DNA Q is a foundational paternal lineage in Indigenous American histories. These genetic signals concord with archaeological expectations of long-term local ancestry rather than a recent foreign incursion.
Because the dataset comprises a single sample, any demographic inference must be stated as highly preliminary. Limited evidence suggests local continuity and affiliation with pan‑American genetic branches, but it cannot resolve fine-scale relationships to nearby coastal or highland groups, nor patterns of kinship within the Pica Ocho community. Genetic data can, however, be paired with isotopic and osteological analyses to reconstruct mobility and diet: for example, if isotopes show marine protein reliance, that would corroborate the coastal subsistence inferred from middens. Future sampling across multiple burials and sites would allow population‑level statistics (e.g., allele sharing, admixture dates, and effective population size estimates), transforming this single genome from a tantalizing hint into a robust demographic narrative.
In sum, the Pica Ocho genome aligns with established Native American haplogroups and supports archaeological impressions of continuity — but broader conclusions await larger sample sizes.