The daily rhythms around Jirentaigoukou likely unfolded against a backdrop of pastoral economies, riverine agriculture, and seasonal movement. Archaeological patterns across the Yili region point to mixed subsistence strategies: herding of sheep and goats, use of mountain pastures, and cultivation in fertile valley bottoms. Such economies often produce burial practices and material assemblages that reflect both local traditions and influences arriving along trade corridors.
Material evidence from contemporaneous sites in Xinjiang shows a blend of functional objects—metal tools, ceramics, and textiles—that reveal hands skilled in both local crafts and imported techniques. Archaeological data indicates that communities in the Ili Valley participated in wider exchange networks, which could bring exotic goods, new technologies, and people. Social structure in such communities tend to be flexible, with networks of kinship, patronage, and seasonal aggregation for markets or ritual.
At Jirentaigoukou, the archaeological footprint is limited and the human sample set small. Therefore reconstructions of social hierarchy or household composition are necessarily cautious. Still, the landscape and material traces suggest lives shaped by movement, adaptation, and connections across the early first millennium BCE.