Archaeological remains present evocative glimpses of daily existence: flaked tools and bladelets from the Altai suggest hunting and hide working, while coastal assemblages in Chukotka (Sireniki, Naukan) show specialized gear for sea mammal hunting and fish processing. Hearths, bone tools and middens preserve foodways — reindeer, salmon, seals — that anchored societies through cold winters and seasonal abundance.
In the Caucasus and western Russia, later Neolithic and Bronze Age layers reveal ceramics, agricultural residues, and fortified settlements that indicate household economy, craft specialization, and emerging social hierarchies. Burial practices vary dramatically: simple inhumations in northern hunter-gatherer cemeteries contrast with richly furnished burials on the steppe where metalwork and horse equipment appear, reflecting new social identities.
Material culture correlates with mobility: small, portable toolkits in tundra and taiga zones versus heavier ceramic traditions in agrarian zones. Isotopic and aDNA evidence, where available, point to seasonal mobility, bride exchange, and long-distance connections. Archaeological signals of trade — non-local lithics and ornaments — testify to networks that genetic data now confirm as avenues of gene flow.