The ancient DNA signal from the Erdaojingzi samples is tantalizing but preliminary: only three individuals inform the genetic profile assigned to China_WLR_LN. Paternal markers include haplogroups NO (1) and O (1). Haplogroup NO is a major East Eurasian branch that ultimately splits into lineages common across northern and eastern Eurasia, while haplogroup O is widespread among East and Southeast Asian populations. Together, these Y-chromosome calls are consistent with continuity of northern East Asian paternal ancestry in the West Liao River corridor.
Mitochondrial diversity across the three samples includes broad haplogroup N (1), the A22 subclade (1), and B (1). Haplogroup N is a deep maternal lineage found broadly across Eurasia; A22 and B are lineages with strong ties to East and Northeast Asia and, in later millennia, to populations farther afield. This mix suggests maternal connections that span local Northeast Asian variation and links into wider East Asian maternal pools.
Crucially, with n=3 the dataset is small. Population-level inferences—such as continuity, admixture proportions, or demographic shifts—remain highly tentative. Archaeological context helps situate these genetic snapshots, but larger and temporally broader sampling is required to resolve micro-scale population dynamics in the West Liao River basin.