Archaeology reconstructs a tactile, sensory world: the crackle of hearths, the grind of cereals on stone querns, and the clink of polished axes used to clear woodlands. Sites such as El Toro and El Portalón (Atapuerca) preserve features interpreted as domestic structures, storage pits, and burial deposits. Plant remains show cultivated einkorn, emmer, and barley alongside pulses; faunal assemblages include domesticated sheep, goats, cattle, and pigs—evidence for a mixed farming economy that would have reshaped diet, mobility, and social organization.
Pottery styles and lithic tools vary between upland and lowland sites, reflecting local adaptations and exchange networks. Burials, often in caves or rockshelters (for example, Murciélagos de Zuheros), range from isolated interments to clustered deposits; grave goods are typically modest, suggesting communities with household-based social structures rather than highly stratified elites. Bioarchaeological indicators—skeletal markers of labor, diet isotopes where available, and funerary treatment—allow cautious reconstructions of age, health, and social roles, but preservation varies by site.
Archaeological evidence therefore portrays communities anchored to agriculture and animal husbandry, experimenting with pottery technology and establishing new settlement patterns. Yet regional diversity and gaps in the record mean that many details of social life—household composition, marriage practices, and the scale of inter-community networks—remain only partially illuminated.