Twenty-two individuals sampled from Tian Shan contexts (dated ca. 1–700 CE) yield a genetic picture of admixture across the steppe. Y-chromosome calls are reported for 12 male-derived profiles: R (5), Q (5), L (1), E (1). Mitochondrial haplogroups are reported for 11 individuals: C (3), A16 (2), U (2), H (2), F (2). These counts show a pronounced mixture of West Eurasian (R, H, U) and East Eurasian (Q, C, A, F) lineages, consistent with archaeological evidence for cross-regional interaction.
Interpretation must be cautious: Y and mtDNA calls are uniparental markers that reflect only single ancestral lines and often come from a subset of the total 22 samples. The presence of R and H/U lineages suggests West Eurasian contributions, while Q, C and A16 indicate eastern Siberian or Central Asian maternal/paternal inputs. The single L and E Y-lineages may reflect episodic gene flow from southern or southwestern regions (South/Central Asia and the Near East/North Africa, respectively), though low counts prevent firm conclusions.
Taken together, the aDNA implies a multiethnic population shaped by mobility, patrilineal and matrilineal mixing, and networked contacts. Genome-wide data (when available) will be required to quantify proportions of ancestry components and to test models of admixture, continuity, and demographic change across the Hun period in the Tian Shan.