Archaeological traces conjure a maritime rhythm: seasonal expeditions to hunt seals, walrus, and occasional whales; workshops where ivory and bone were transformed into functional and symbolic objects; and shoreward settlements that served as hubs for kin networks. Ecofacts and toolkits recovered at Ekven show a focus on sea mammal exploitation—composite harpoon heads, toggling points, and specialized woodworking gear—that required coordinated group effort and technical knowledge.
Cemeteries and grave goods indicate social complexity expressed through material display. Individuals were sometimes interred with carved ivory plaques and decorated implements, suggesting status differences or roles tied to craft and hunting. Artistic motifs—zoomorphic and abstract—may have encoded identity, cosmology, or alliances within a wide network of coastal exchanges. Archaeological data indicates active trade and stylistic exchange across the Bering Strait, visible in shared decorative vocabularies and technological similarities.
Seasonal mobility, social gatherings for exchange, and a reliance on marine resources created resilient lifeways adapted to Arctic margins. Yet many demographic and social details (household size, exact kinship structures) remain only partially resolved due to preservation biases and uneven sampling.