On the windswept tundra of Chukotka, the cemetery and occupation layers at Ekven preserve a whisper of Iron Age coastal life. Archaeological data indicates intermittent settlement and mortuary activity between the later first millennium BCE and the early centuries CE (samples here date between 376 BCE and 330 CE). Material culture at Ekven aligns with broader Arctic maritime traditions — a lifeway built on seal, walrus, fish and sea bird resources — and the site sits along routes that once threaded across the Bering Sea bridge of ideas and genes.
Genetic results from five individuals hint at deep eastern Siberian and Beringian roots. The predominance of Y-chromosome haplogroup Q — four of five males — echoes patterns seen in other northern Eurasian and Native American-linked populations. Maternal lineages dominated by mtDNA A and D further point toward an East Asian/Beringian genetic substrate. Limited evidence suggests continuity with earlier coastal groups, but because the sample count is small (<10), these patterns remain preliminary and invite further sampling across time and neighboring sites.
Taken together, the archaeological and genetic signals suggest Ekven functioned as a regional node in Arctic networks: culturally distinct yet genetically connected to a trans-Beringian population tapestry. Future excavations and additional genomes will be needed to confirm migration timing and local continuity.