Three ancient genomes recovered from Shengdaliang (Shenmu, Shanxi) dated between ca. 2884 and 1950 BCE provide a first, cautious window into the people of Late Neolithic Shimao. Uniparental markers are simple but informative: Y-DNA observed includes haplogroups O (1 individual) and C (1 individual); mtDNA lineages include D, G, and M (one each). These haplogroups are commonly associated with prehistoric and modern East Asian and northern Asian populations—haplogroup O being widespread in Neolithic and later East Asia, and C appearing in northern and northeastern Eurasian contexts.
Important caveats frame interpretation. With only three samples, statistical power is minimal and any symmetry with modern populations may reflect shared deep ancestry rather than direct descent. Archaeological data indicates local cultural continuity in many aspects, and the genetic signals are broadly consistent with an East Asian substrate, but autosomal affinities, admixture events, and sex-biased processes cannot be resolved from this small dataset alone. The presence of both O and C Y-lineages suggests diversity in paternal lines, while the mtDNA diversity (D, G, M) indicates heterogeneous maternal ancestries compatible with regional Neolithic demographic patterns.
Integration with larger archaeogenetic datasets will be essential: genome-wide data could test for continuity with contemporaneous Yellow River populations, detect incoming gene flow, and illuminate demographic responses to social complexity. For now, conclusions must remain provisional—limited evidence suggests local East Asian genetic affinities, but more samples are required to move beyond tentative statements.