Archaeological traces from SubGeometric contexts like Değirmendere suggest communities organized at the household and neighborhood scale. Domestic architecture in comparable Aegean and Anatolian sites often features simple stone foundations, storage vessels and hearth-centered activity areas; while direct architectural descriptions from Değirmendere are limited, such analogies help reconstruct daily rhythms. The economy likely balanced subsistence farming (cereals, pulses), pasturing of small stock and exploitation of marine resources—fishing, shellfish gathering and coastal trade.
Material culture—coarsewares for storage, finer painted bowls for consumption—reflects both practical needs and social display. Limited burial evidence in the region hints at modest grave goods and rites that integrate local customs with broader Aegean mortuary vocabulary. Communal life would have been defined by seasonal cycles, the demands of sea and land, and networks of exchange that brought pottery, raw materials and ideas along the coasts. Socially, these settlements were probably small-scale polities with kin-based households; elite aggregation appears muted compared with the later Classical urban centers.
Archaeological data indicates that communal identity in the SubGeometric period was negotiated through craft, foodways and maritime ties, producing a textured cultural landscape where local practice and external influence coexisted.