Archaeological features from Kvärlöv. Saxtorp and Gökhem reveal the textures of everyday Middle Neolithic life: domestic structures, pottery with funnel-shaped rims, flint toolkits, and communal burials. Material remains indicate mixed economies—crop cultivation and animal husbandry supplemented by fishing and foraging in nearby coastal and wetland environments.
Communal monuments and burial practices suggest social boundaries and ritual expression: graves and collective monuments anchored landscapes and memories. Craft traditions—pottery styles, polished axes, and bone tools—trace networks of contact beyond southern Sweden. Seasonal rhythms of sowing, harvesting, and maritime resource use framed social life, while exchange of raw materials connected TRB communities to neighboring regions.
Archaeological data indicates variability between settlements: some show more intensive farming signals, others stronger continuity with forager lifeways. This mosaic would have shaped childhood, labor roles, and social ceremonies, although specifics at individual sites remain partly obscured by the passage of millennia.