The daily rhythms at Neolithic Dushan can be imagined through the imprint left on stone, pottery and faunal remains. Archaeological data indicates communities likely organized around seasonal resource rounds — tending small cultivated plots, exploiting riverine fisheries and collecting wild plants. Pottery fragments suggest storage and cooking technologies that enabled more sedentary lifeways, while polished stone adzes and ground implements point to woodworking and landscape modification.
Social life was probably flexible and locally structured. Features such as hearths, pit storage and small burial deposits (if present) imply household-level organization rather than large, hierarchical centers. Exchange of raw materials and decorative motifs across southern China is suggested by stylistic affinities in pottery and lithics, hinting at networks of interaction rather than mass migration.
Osteological and isotopic data from Guangxi sites more broadly (though not abundant at Dushan specifically) often indicate diets dominated by plant foods supplemented by freshwater protein. Seasonal mobility, kin-based households, and nuanced responses to a dynamic environment would have defined daily existence.
These reconstructions are provisional: the single ancient-genome sample offers a biological anchor but insufficient demographic resolution to reconstruct community structure with confidence.