The Shenxian Cave project produced one ancient mitochondrial genome assigned to haplogroup D4a, dated between 601 and 673 CE. Mitochondrial lineage D4 is widespread across East Asia and into northeastern regions; subclade D4a appears across modern populations in China, Japan, Korea, and Siberia, and in some ancient East Asian samples. This maternal marker ties the Shenxian individual into a broad East Asian maternal network but does not by itself resolve fine-scale ancestry or recent migrations.
Critically, no Y‑chromosome (paternal) data are reported for this individual, so paternal affinities remain unknown. With a sample count of one, inferences about population structure, sex-biased migration, or demographic shifts are necessarily provisional. Archaeogenetic practice therefore treats this result as an important but preliminary datapoint: it confirms that an East Asian maternal lineage was present in Guangxi in the early 7th century, but it cannot distinguish whether that lineage reflects long-term local continuity, recent maternal migration, or admixture at community or household levels.
Future sampling from Shenxian Cave and nearby contemporaneous sites, including autosomal genomes and additional uniparental markers, would allow robust testing of hypotheses about continuity, incoming gene flow during Tang-era trade, and relationships to modern Guangxi populations. Until then, the genetic finding remains a cinematic, single-voiced witness to a complex regional history.