Twelve Tayopa individuals provide a first glimpse of population genetics in Sahuaripa between 500–1400 CE. The most striking pattern is the predominance of Y-chromosome haplogroup Q (8 of 12 males), consistent with wider pre-contact Indigenous male lineages across North and Central America. On the mitochondrial side, observed haplogroups include B (2), B2a (2), C5b (2), A2c (1) and two samples assigned to macro-haplogroup R. The mtDNA totals sum to fewer individuals than the full sample, indicating that not all specimens yielded complete mitochondrial data or that some sequences were ambiguous at the subclade level.
Interpretation requires nuance: haplogroup Q on the Y-chromosome aligns Tayopa men with long-standing Indigenous paternal lineages, suggesting deep regional continuity. Maternal lineages are diverse and dominated by clades (A2, B2, C5b) that are widespread among Native American populations, supporting local continuity on the maternal side as well. The designation R in two mitochondrial results likely reflects low-resolution assignments to macro-haplogroup R or unassigned sublineages; because haplogroup B derives from R, caution is warranted and higher-resolution sequencing could clarify these calls.
With only 12 samples, statistical power is limited: demographic reconstructions, admixture modeling and fine-scale kinship inferences are preliminary. Still, the genetic snapshot echoes the archaeological picture of a regionally rooted community with maternal and paternal lineages typical of northern Mexico. Expanded sampling and genome-wide data will be necessary to test hypotheses about migration, sex-biased mobility and long-distance contacts.