The genomic suite from Ulaanzuukh (11 individuals) is marked by clear Northeast Asian maternal continuity and a more heterogeneous paternal signal. Mitochondrial haplogroups are dominated by D and C lineages (D: 4, C: 4, plus single D4, C4, and A), haplogroups that are widespread across Siberia and northeastern Asia. Archaeogenetic patterns like these suggest deep maternal ancestry rooted in the region and resilience of maternal lineages across Bronze Age, Xiongnu, and medieval contexts.
Y-chromosome data are limited: only three individuals carry resolvable male-line haplogroups in this series (Q: 2, O: 1). Haplogroup Q is associated broadly with Siberian and Central Asian steppe populations and is a lineage seen in ancient northeastern Eurasia; O is common in East Asia and can reflect gene flow from eastern agricultural or steppe-adjacent groups. Because the male sample is small (n=3), conclusions about paternal continuity, social structure, or male-biased migration are tentative. Genetic evidence indicates a pattern of local maternal persistence with episodes of admixture or male-mediated gene flow, consistent with archaeological signs of long-distance contacts and mobility.
Overall, the combined archaeological and genetic signals portray a landscape of enduring local roots layered with intermittent external inputs — a mosaic recorded in both bones and artifacts.