Modern Cambodian daily life is animated by seasonal rhythms and layered traditions: the pulse of the wet season fed into rice cultivation, river fishing on the Tonlé Sap, and market exchanges that connect villages to urban centers like Phnom Penh. Ethnographic accounts and archaeological remains (house platforms, ceramic assemblages, irrigation features) show long-standing household economies where rice, freshwater fish, and craft production are central.
Material traces — from pottery styles recovered in provincial digs to the foundations of rural shrines — document continuity in domestic practice and ritual. Urban archaeological strata in older quarters of Phnom Penh and provincial towns show colonial-era overlays on premodern urban cores, reflecting new trade ties and migration patterns that continue to shape social life.
Archaeology also captures social differentiation: temple complexes, elite burials, and monumental art versus modest rural assemblages. These patterns suggest that modern social diversity emerged from long-term processes of centralization, trade, and mobility. For the 2000 CE samples, lifestyle inference is cautious: genetics can indicate ancestry components and recent admixture, but material culture remains essential to understand occupation, craft, and ritual contexts that DNA alone cannot reveal.