The Kuokesuxi assemblage sits on the wind‑scoured plateau and river terraces of the Yili Valley in Xinjiang, at a crossroads between the Central Asian steppe and the agricultural oases of eastern Central Asia. Archaeological excavations at Kuokesuxi (Tekesi County) have yielded Early Iron Age burials and material traces dated by radiocarbon and associated context to roughly 538–24 BCE. These dates place Kuokesuxi within a period of intensified mobility, exchange, and technological change across Eurasia.
Archaeological data indicate a community engaged with both local traditions and broader networks; grave features and portable items reflect regional Iron Age practices rather than a single intrusive culture. Limited evidence suggests connections—economic and cultural—to neighboring steppe groups and oasis populations, but the precise mechanisms of contact (trade, marriage, migration) require more data to resolve.
Genetic samples from Kuokesuxi, though few, can illuminate these processes by tracing biological connections across landscapes. With only seven genomes available, any reconstruction of origins is necessarily cautious: the population history implied by the site seems to be one of admixture and interaction, but the small sample set means hypotheses remain preliminary pending larger-scale sampling.