Archaeological excavations at Makotrasy suggest a community oriented to mixed farming, seasonal rounds, and craft production. Pits, post-holes and hearths indicate timber-built houses and domestic yards. Archaeobotanical remains from nearby Chalcolithic contexts (regional survey) point to cereals and pulses as staples, while faunal remains indicate cattle, sheep/goat, and pig—supporting a pastoral-agricultural economy.
The ceramic assemblage—simple, often cord-impressed or burnished wares—served both mundane storage and ritual functions. Burials associated with Baalberge contexts emphasize articulated inhumations with modest grave goods; such practices hint at household-based social organization with emerging distinctions in ritual expression. Copper artifacts, though infrequent, signal knowledge of metal use and participation in exchange networks that threaded through Central Europe.
Archaeological data indicates that communities like Makotrasy were neither isolated hamlets nor urban centers but resilient microcosms: households anchored to particular plots of land, linked through marriage, commensality, and exchange. Seasonal mobility, craft specialization, and long-distance contacts likely colored everyday life—features that align with the diversity observed in the genetic record.