Daily life in the Amur Neolithic likely unfolded with the rhythms of the river: seasonal pulses of spawning fish, migratory birds, and the movement of game. Archaeological assemblages contain ground and chipped stone tools, pottery fragments with simple cord or comb impressions, and faunal remains dominated by freshwater fish and medium-sized ungulates. These remains imply technologies adapted to processing fish (butchery marks, bone concentrations) and preserving seasonal surplus, though direct evidence for storage features is sparse.
Sites suggest small to medium-sized bands, perhaps aggregating seasonally for social exchange, resource abundance, or ritual activities. The presence of worked bone, antler, and domestic debris implies craft specialization at a household level—cordage, netting, simple fishing gear, and composite stone-bone implements. Funerary data are limited but indicate a range of burial treatments, sometimes with grave goods, hinting at social differentiation that remains difficult to quantify.
Environmental resilience mattered: these communities navigated flood cycles, ice, and shifting fish runs, adapting mobility and settlement to the river’s moods. Archaeological data indicates a people intimately tied to the Amur as a highway and pantry, shaping both material culture and social organization around predictable ecological wealth.