Life along the Shandong littoral during the Early Neolithic would have been shaped by the sea, estuaries and nearby uplands. Archaeological indications — regionally reported shell middens, fish bones, and pottery traditions — imply diets rich in marine protein supplemented by terrestrial mammals, wild plants and potentially early domesticated crops in nearby lowlands. Craft production likely centered on pottery, stone tools, and cordage for nets and traps, technologies well suited to a mixed foraging and early food‑producing economy.
Social organization at small coastal villages was probably flexible and kin‑based. Seasonal mobility may have been practiced, moving between coastal camps to exploit fish and shellfish and inland locales for plant resources. Burial practices and material culture remain unevenly preserved at the named sites; where burials are available, they provide only a partial glimpse into social differentiation. Artistic expression, if present, may have been embedded in decorated pottery or personal ornaments made from shell and bone.
Because preservation and excavation coverage vary across Shandong, many aspects of everyday life remain inferred rather than directly observed. Integrating ancient DNA with isotopic and zooarchaeological analyses can sharpen reconstructions of diet, mobility and social networks, but current genetic samples are too few to reveal community‑wide behaviors.