The lives of these Neolithic inhabitants were shaped by a mixed palette of agriculture, craft, and seasonal mobility. Archaeological remains show domestic architecture, storage pits, and hearths—evidence for households organized around cereal cultivation and domesticated animals such as cattle and sheep. Pottery with funnel-shaped rims was both functional and stylistic, used for cooking, storage, and possibly communal feasting.
Burial practices at small cemeteries and isolated graves provide glimpses of social identity. Grave goods are typically modest: fragments of pottery, polished axes, and occasional personal ornaments. The relative scarcity of monumental tombs in these Bohemian sites suggests small, horizontally organized communities rather than centralized elites. Lithic and bone tools testify to woodworking, hide processing, and food preparation, while pollen and macrofossil remains indicate a landscape increasingly shaped by fields and pastures.
Archaeobotanical indicators hint at seasonal rhythms—fields tilled in spring, stored harvests through winter, and woodland resources exploited year-round. Interaction with neighboring groups is visible in traded raw materials and shared pottery styles, implying networks of exchange across Central Europe. Yet, the nuanced picture of household size, kinship structure, and status differences remains tentative given the limited sample of human remains.