Archaeological remains from Early Neolithic sites in Vojvodina portray an economy based on domesticated plants and animals, pottery production, and settled hamlets. Hearth-centered houses and storage pits implied a seasonal rhythm of sowing, harvesting and animal husbandry. Stone tools and ground adzes attest to woodworking and construction activities necessary for longhouse architecture.
Burial practices in the region are varied; limited excavations at sites like Hrtkovci have produced isolated graves and inhumations that, when combined with regional parallels, suggest community-based funerary customs rather than monumental cemeteries. Artefacts and wear patterns hint at a division of labor that balanced household tasks with communal food production.
Environmentally, the Pannonian plain offered rich alluvial soils and riverine resources. Archaeobotanical finds from nearby Early Neolithic contexts typically include einkorn, emmer and pulses; faunal assemblages emphasize goats, sheep and cattle. These economic shifts reconfigured social relations, property concepts and mobility patterns.
All of these reconstructions remain conditioned by the fragmentary record at Hrtkovci and Gomolova: archaeological data indicates local settlement, but site-scale variability and limited excavation mean many aspects of daily life are inferred from regional comparisons.