At El Soco, the archaeological record evokes a coastal village lit by dawn and shaped by seasons. Ceramic vessels — cooking pots, bowls, and storage jars — form the domestic backbone, their shapes attesting to prepared stews, cassava processing, and communal meals. Middens with shell, fish bone, and small vertebrates testify to intensive use of nearshore resources; stone tools and shell implements reflect craft specialization.
Architectural evidence from related Ceramic-period sites suggests that households clustered in small compounds, often near garden plots and access points to lagoons or the sea. Social life likely centered on kin groups and reciprocal exchange; decorative motifs on pottery and personal ornaments signal group identities and perhaps ritual practice. Graves, where preserved, sometimes include grave goods — a practice that can illuminate status differences and belief systems.
Archaeological data indicate a dynamic economy: cultivated root crops and seasonal fishing cycles, canoe-based travel between islands, and inter-community exchange of pottery styles and raw materials. While El Soco yields tangible traces of daily practice, many aspects of social organization remain inferential — genetic data provide a complementary thread to reconstruct family ties, population size, and mobility patterns across generations.