The genomic signal available for this cultural label is limited: two individuals, both carrying mitochondrial haplogroup S. Haplogroup S is recognized among Aboriginal Australian maternal lineages and its presence here is consistent with archaeological continuity in New South Wales. Because mtDNA traces only the maternal line, it offers a narrow but valuable window into one strand of ancestry.
No Y‑chromosome haplogroups are reported for these samples, so paternal-line patterns remain unknown. With only two genomes, any population-level inference is preliminary: low sample counts (<10) can misrepresent diversity and obscure micro‑regional structure. Contamination, preservation biases and the uneven survival of DNA in Australian climates further complicate interpretation.
Despite these limits, the genetic data complements archaeology in useful ways. Shared mtDNA types across spatially separated sites may suggest maternal connections or long-standing local continuity; differences could indicate mobility, marriage exchange networks, or changes in demographic structure. Deep time studies of Australian ancient DNA have shown substantial continuity from Pleistocene and Holocene periods into recent centuries, but localized sampling — as in NSW — is essential to understand the finer grain of ancestry.
All genetic interpretations must be framed by ethical collaboration with Indigenous communities, who bring crucial context and consent to the study of ancestral remains.