Genome-wide and uniparental data from six individuals at Selenge sites provide a cautious but evocative genetic snapshot. Y-chromosome haplogroups include N (2 individuals) and C (1 individual); mitochondrial haplogroups observed are M (1), G (1), D (1), G1a (1), and Z3c (1). These markers are broadly consistent with northern Eurasian and East Asian mitochondrial diversity and with male lineages common on the steppe and in adjacent Siberia.
Haplogroup N is frequent among northern Eurasian and Uralic-speaking populations and can signal deep connections to taiga and forest-steppe regions; haplogroup C is widespread across Central and East Asia and is often found in steppe pastoral contexts, including many Mongolic and Tungusic-speaking groups. Maternal lineages M, G and D are common across East Asia and Siberia, reflecting regional matrilineal continuity.
Interpretation must stress uncertainty: with only six genomes, observed frequencies may not represent population-level proportions. Small sample size (<10) makes demographic inferences preliminary; patterns could reflect kin groups, localized gene flow, or sampling bias from the specific burial contexts. Nevertheless, the mix of northern (N-associated) and broadly East Asian (C, M, G, D, Z) signals aligns with archaeological expectations of a Selenge population positioned between taiga and open steppe, experiencing both local continuity and wider connectivity. Future, larger datasets and high-resolution genome analyses will be necessary to test hypotheses about sex-biased migration, admixture timing, and continuity with modern populations.