Ancient DNA from six individuals excavated at Songo Mnara provides a preliminary window into the biological heritage of this Swahili town. All six mitochondrial genomes belong to haplogroup L, a set of lineages that are widespread in sub‑Saharan Africa; Y‑chromosome data are limited but include haplogroup E in three male individuals, a common African paternal lineage. These findings are consistent with a strong local African maternal and paternal contribution among the sampled individuals.
While the archaeological record documents wide-ranging trade and regular contact with Arabian, Persian, and South Asian networks, the current aDNA sample does not robustly demonstrate large‑scale non‑African lineage frequencies at Songo Mnara. That said, six samples are a small dataset: when sample count is low (<10), conclusions remain provisional. Limited evidence suggests continuity of African ancestry in these burials, but low sample size reduces power to detect minority ancestry components or intermittent immigrant individuals.
Future, larger genetic datasets from Songo Mnara and neighbouring Swahili towns (e.g., Kilwa Kisiwani) will be required to resolve questions about admixture timing, sex‑biased gene flow, and the relationship between material cosmopolitanism and biological ancestry. For now, the DNA and archaeology together portray a coastal society rooted in African lineages while engaged in oceanic networks.