Eleven ancient genomes from Wuzhuangguoliang provide a compact but informative snapshot of ancestry in Late Neolithic Shaanxi. Among the sequenced individuals, Y-chromosome F is observed in at least two males — a lineage widespread across East and Southeast Asia in ancient and modern datasets. On the maternal side, mtDNA haplogroups recorded include B (3 individuals), A (including A7, together 2), G (1), and D (1). These maternal lineages are commonly associated with Neolithic and post-Neolithic populations of northern and eastern Asia.
Together the uniparental markers and genome-wide affinities point toward strong local East Asian ancestry, consistent with continuity from earlier Yellow River Neolithic populations and with the demographic substrate that would later contribute to regional genetic landscapes. However, the sample size is modest and geographically restricted to a single locality; some haplogroups present in the assemblage are missing or undersampled and broader population structure (admixture with northern hunter-gatherers or southern groups) may not be fully captured. Therefore, conclusions about population movements, sex-biased migration, or long-term continuity should be treated as provisional pending larger, geographically diverse sampling and higher-resolution analyses.