Eleven ancient genomes from Xiaohe provide a compact but revealing genetic portrait. Ten of the eleven individuals carry mtDNA haplogroup C4, a lineage with strong presence in northern and northeastern Eurasia; this overwhelming maternal signal implies deep East Eurasian maternal ancestry in the sampled community. One individual bears an mtDNA R lineage, underscoring some mitochondrial diversity.
On the paternal side, two of the males carry Y-chromosome haplogroup R. Haplogroup R is heterogeneous and includes branches common in West Eurasia and the Eurasian steppe; its presence at Xiaohe is consistent with at least some west-to-east male-mediated gene flow during the Bronze Age. Taken together, the uniparental picture suggests asymmetric ancestry inputs: dominant local or northerly maternal lines with a minority of western-affiliated paternal markers. Autosomal data from other Tarim Basin individuals (where available) have often shown mixtures of West Eurasian and East Eurasian components; while Xiaohe’s small sample (n=11) restricts sweeping claims, the uniparental patterns align with a model of contact and admixture across the southern steppe and oasis corridors.
Caveats: with only eleven samples, patterns should be treated as preliminary. More genomes across broader chronological intervals are needed to resolve the timing and sources of admixture, the social structure behind sex-biased gene flow, and continuity with later populations.