The material traces from Arroyo Seco II paint a portrait of resilient, mobile lifeways adapted to the open Pampas. Stone tools—flakes and light cutting implements—alongside hearth features suggest tasks of butchery, woodworking and plant processing. Faunal remains and microcharcoal indicate hearthside activities and a diet rooted in locally available animals and plant resources; wetland margins and seasonal pools in the landscape would have provided fish, birds and tubers as complements to terrestrial game.
Social life is inferred from the burial practice that preserved the single sequenced individual. Funerary treatment, while modest, implies attention to the dead and emergent social identities within small groups. Mobility likely structured social networks: exchange of raw materials for lithics and knowledge of seasonal resource patches would have linked Arroyo Seco II inhabitants with neighboring bands. However, archaeological data is fragmentary—site taphonomy and the limited number of well‑documented contexts mean reconstructions remain provisional and evocative rather than definitive.