The daily world at Jabuticabeira II would have been luminous with the smell of salt, smoke, and fish oil. Archaeological remains — concentrated shell layers, fish vertebrae, stone tools, and occasional exotic ornaments — point to a mixed subsistence strategy focused on estuarine and nearshore resources. Midden architecture implies repeated, place-based activities: processing shellfish, repairing nets and hooks, and preparing bundled offerings or grave goods for interments within the mounds.
Burials found within sambaquis show variability in treatment: some individuals were interred with ochre, shells, and pieces of worked stone. Such mortuary variability suggests complex social identities and possibly ranked or age-graded roles tied to maritime knowledge. Material culture shows continuity with other southern coastal sites, but also local expressions — ornaments and tool types that reflect both everyday utility and symbolic display.
Seasonal mobility likely supplemented a strong coastal attachment: groups probably moved short distances to follow fish runs, birds, and shellfish seasons, returning to anchored sites like Jabuticabeira II that accumulated generations of social memory.