Genetic data from Taukome is extremely limited: one ancient individual dated to 900–1000 CE yielded mitochondrial haplogroup L. Haplogroup L is a broad set of maternal lineages widespread across sub-Saharan Africa and is expected in southern African contexts. The single mtDNA result suggests continuity of local maternal ancestry but cannot speak to population structure, patrilineal lines, or admixture dynamics.
No Y-chromosome haplogroup was reported for the Taukome sample, so paternal ancestry remains undetermined. With a sample count of one, it is impossible to resolve whether this individual was typical of the community, an outlier, or part of a more diverse population. Archaeogenetic comparisons across the region increasingly show mixtures of local hunter-gatherer, pastoralist, and incoming farmer-associated ancestries during the first and second millennia CE; limited evidence suggests Taukome likely participated in these broader demographic processes, but robust claims require many more genomes.
Future sampling at Taukome and neighboring Early Iron Age sites in Botswana could reveal whether maternal haplogroup L here represents a local continuity, demographic influx, or a mosaic of lineages. For now, the genetic profile offers a poignant, solitary thread: a maternal lineage anchoring one life to the long prehistory of southern Africa.