Four ancient DNA samples from Dacaozi provide an intimate but preliminary genetic snapshot. Y-chromosome data show haplogroup O in the sampled male(s), a lineage widespread across East and Southeast Asia and commonly associated with many historical populations in China. Mitochondrial diversity in the four individuals includes F1g, G, D, and Z3 — maternal lineages that are broadly East Asian in distribution and appear in both northern and northeastern Asian contexts.
These markers together suggest regional affinity with other Upper Yellow River and Han-era populations, but do not imply direct ancestry without broader sampling and temporal coverage. With only four genomes, statistical power is low and patterns may reflect kinship or micro-regional variation rather than population-wide norms.
Archaeogenetic signal complements the archaeology by indicating maternal diversity paired with at least one common paternal lineage; such a contrast can reflect patrilocal residence, exogamy, or simply the vagaries of four samples. Future sampling from neighboring sites and stratified burials will be needed to test hypotheses about mobility, kinship, and demographic change across the Iron Age to Han transition.