The Jordanów-associated communities in Bohemia likely lived in small villages or seasonal hamlets near rivers and fertile soils. Archaeological traces in the region (pottery sherds, modified stone tools, and occasional ecofacts) indicate a mixed economic strategy: cultivated cereals and pulses plausibly supplemented by hunting, fishing and foraging. Hearths and isolated pits hint at domestic food preparation and storage, while ceramics—often stylistically diagnostic—would have been used for cooking, storage and possibly ritual.
Social organization can only be inferred indirectly. Craft specialization was likely limited; pottery and lithic production were community-centered activities. Mobility appears moderate: people exploited local resources but maintained connections with neighboring Jordanów groups through exchange of styles and perhaps marriage networks. Burials are sparse in the Bohemian record for this phase, so household composition, social hierarchy and mortuary customs remain poorly understood.
Archaeobotanical and zooarchaeological data are thin or uneven from these sites, so statements about diet and seasonality are provisional. The cinematic image is of small, resilient communities shaping riverside landscapes—adaptive, connected, and embedded within wider Neolithic transformations across Central Europe.