Nestled on the southern rim of the Tarim Basin, Hetian (Hotan) and Luopu County occupy a liminal landscape where mountain passes funnel people, goods and ideas. Archaeological data indicates the human remains sampled from burial contexts dated between 1 and 400 CE reflect communities living during the early Historical Period of Xinjiang. The material record in the region — funerary deposits, occasional textiles, and locally produced ceramics noted in site reports — portrays small settlements tied to long‑distance exchange.
Genetically, these Hetian historical individuals are part of a dynamic frontier. Limited evidence from nine successfully sequenced individuals suggests a tapestry of ancestries: paternal lineages dominated by haplogroup O (typical of East Asia) alongside maternal lineages that include haplogroup U, more often associated with West Eurasian gene pools. This pattern is consistent with archaeological models of frontier communities shaped by local continuity and episodic contact along early Silk Road routes. Because the sample count is small, the picture of emergence remains provisional; ongoing excavations and larger aDNA datasets will be necessary to resolve demographic trajectories and the timing of admixture events.