Daily existence for Middle Dorset communities was shaped by shifting sea-ice and the rhythms of marine life. Archaeology indicates seasonal movement between coastal hunting localities and inland resource patches. Small dwellings—often sunken winter houses reconstructed from stone and turf—and the ubiquitous soapstone or stone lamps (qulliq-like heating devices) provide intimate glimpses of domestic routine: cooking, tool repair, and small-scale carving.
Material culture emphasizes efficient hunting technology: bone and antler harpoons, microblades, and composite tools adapted to catching seals and occasional larger whales. Ornamentation and miniaturized carvings, frequently found at sites, suggest symbolic or social dimensions to objects and perhaps kinship-based group identities. Social organization likely centered on small kin groups with seasonal aggregations; however, direct evidence for social hierarchy is scant.
Environmental reconstructions show that Dorset lifeways were finely tuned to local ecologies, with flexible mobility allowing exploitation of predictable marine resources. Archaeological evidence indicates cultural resilience, yet shifts in climate, sea-ice patterns, and later interactions would alter these lifeways over centuries.