At Gonur life unfolded amid canals, courtyards, and workshop complexes. Excavations reveal craft neighborhoods for bronze working, bead production, textile tools, and specialized storage — an economy built on irrigated grain, herding, and artisan exchange. Rich funerary contexts and platform temples imply hierarchical social organization; some burials contain exotic goods that reflect far-reaching trade networks.
Dietary and craft remains show a blended subsistence economy. Charred grains and animal bones attest to wheat, barley, sheep, and cattle; artisans fashioned bronze, shell, and faience objects likely traded across southern Central Asia. Ceremonial spaces and elaborate burial offerings suggest ritual leaders or elite households that managed redistribution and long-distance contacts.
Genetic data complement this social reading: mitochondrial diversity (HV, T, U, R2, N) implies that women in the population came from a range of maternal backgrounds, consistent with exogamic marriage networks or mobility of family units. Y-DNA heterogeneity (J, R, T, P, E) hints that male lineages were likewise varied. Together, archaeological and genetic traces paint Gonur as a mosaic city where daily economics, ritual life, and kinship were entwined across regional networks.
Archaeological interpretations remain under active study; isotopic and more extensive aDNA sampling will refine models of residence, mobility, and social organization.