The trans-Himalayan region of Ladakh occupies a strategic position at the crossroads of South Asia, the Tibetan Plateau, and Central Asia, with archaeological evidence pointing to long-term cultural exchanges across these regions. However, the human genetic history of Ladakh remains largely unexplored. We generated paleogenomic data from seven individuals recovered from two sites in Western Ladakh - the Old Lady Spider Cave and Hanu - of which six are dated to 531-585 CE and one to the 19th century CE. The older individuals share substantial genetic ancestry with Tibetan groups but also harbor major contributions from two additional sources: one corresponding to the currently-oldest observation of the Ancestral North Indian genetic component that characterizes several present-day populations in North India and Pakistan, and another related to ancient Central Asian groups, with admixture events occurring between ~2,100-2,500 years ago. In contrast, the later individual falls within a previously described ancient northern Himalayan genetic cline based on ~1,100-1,300-year-old individuals from Himachal Pradesh, with ancestries related to ancient Tibetan and Steppe-related sources. Stable isotope analysis suggests that these individuals were local to Ladakh in late life and practiced an agro-pastoralist subsistence. Our study establishes that Ladakh's central role in Eurasian economic and socio-cultural networks was shaped by dynamic and sustained gene flow linking high-altitude Himalayan groups with both lowland South Asia and Inner Asia.
Rai et al. (Wed,) studied this question.