Genome-scale data from seven individuals recovered at Lajia and Jinchankou provide a first glimpse of the genetic landscape of the Upper Yellow River in the late Neolithic. Y-chromosome markers are dominated by haplogroup O (four individuals) with one instance of haplogroup D; both are characteristic of East Asian populations. Maternal lineages include G (two), F1g (two), A18, B, and F — a maternal spectrum widely found across northern and northeastern Asia.
These genetic signals are consistent with a population deriving much of its ancestry from long-standing East Asian lineages rather than large-scale recent input from distant regions. The presence of haplogroup D, which is relatively frequent in highland East Asian groups today, may reflect local micro-regional ancestry or ancient connections to upland populations.
Caveats are essential: with only seven samples, statistical power is limited and patterns could shift as more individuals are analyzed. The dataset hints at local continuity in the Upper Yellow River and genetic affinities with broader East Asian Neolithic populations, but it cannot resolve fine-scale migration, sex-biased gene flow, or the timing of admixture events. Archaeogenetic integration with expanded sampling, isotopic mobility studies, and high-resolution radiocarbon dating will be required to move from suggestion to robust models of population history.