The genetic snapshot from the Amur River Early Neolithic is tantalizing but preliminary: only four individuals have been reported from 8175–6831 BCE. Among them a single male carries Y-chromosome haplogroup P (one observation), while mitochondrial lineages recorded include D4m, R11, G, and D. These mtDNA haplogroups are all part of northern East Asian maternal diversity—D and sublineages of D4 are widespread in modern Northeast Asia, G is frequent in Siberia and adjacent regions, and R11 occurs at low frequency in East Asia.
Y-haplogroup P is a deep Eurasian lineage that, in broader phylogenies, sits ancestral to branches found far to the west and east; its presence here—recorded in a single individual—should be treated cautiously and may reflect an early northern Eurasian paternal lineage contributing to later regional diversity. The maternal profiles, taken together, are consistent with long-term continuity of northern East Asian mitochondrial ancestry in the Amur corridor.
Archaeogenetic patterns tentatively link these Early Neolithic Amur individuals to later populations of the region (including groups sampled in historic and modern times), suggesting continuity in at least parts of the maternal gene pool. However, with n=4, stochastic sampling can mislead: additional genomes, especially from multiple sites and times, are needed to resolve population structure, sex-biased processes, and interactions with neighboring Siberian and coastal groups.