Ancient DNA recovered from three individuals at Banla Mountain provides an initial, cautious window into biological ancestry in the West Liao River Middle Neolithic. Two mitochondrial genomes belong to haplogroup D, a lineage widespread in northern and eastern Asia today and frequently observed in Holocene East Asian samples. One Y-chromosome sample is assigned to haplogroup O2a, a paternal lineage common across modern East and Southeast Asia.
These genetic signals align with the archaeological expectation of northeastern East Asian ancestry in the region, suggesting continuity or substantial contribution from populations that share deep roots in northern East Asia. However, the sample count is very low (n=3). When sample counts are under ten, conclusions about population structure, migration, or admixture must be considered preliminary. Limited evidence suggests local continuity with broader East Asian gene pools rather than strong input from distant western Eurasian sources.
Future sampling across more individuals and sites in the West Liao River basin will be essential to test hypotheses about demographic stability, sex-biased mobility, and links to later Neolithic cultures. For now, the genetic data from Banla Mountain complements the archaeological picture: modest, regionally typical lineages that intimate deep northeastern Asian connections.