Archaeological remains from LBK sites like Kleinhadersdorf evoke a tactile, agrarian world. Longhouses—rectangular timber structures—organized family life and storage; pottery served both ritual and household functions while polished stone tools and polished adzes marked woodworking and land clearance. Fields of domesticated cereals and pulses, along with cattle, sheep and pigs, provided a caloric base that allowed denser settlement than foraging life.
Social life was likely organized around extended households and kin groups, with communal work on building and field maintenance. Burials in LBK contexts range from single inhumations to multiple interments associated with domestic spaces; funerary treatment appears variable, reflecting localized customs. Archaeobotanical and zooarchaeological data from nearby LBK sites indicate seasonal rhythms: sowing and harvest, herd management and storage strategies for winter months. For Kleinhadersdorf specifically, excavation reports record pottery styles and settlement features consistent with early LBK lifeways, but details of social hierarchy and ritual remain partly conjectural due to limited excavation scope and the single genetic sample.