Fragments of pottery, tools, and funerary goods at Kokcha 3 sketch everyday rhythms: hearth-centered homes, seasonal herding, and itinerant exchange. Archaeological evidence indicates mixed subsistence strategies—dryland farming in fertile pockets, complemented by pastoral practices that exploited highland pastures. Bronze tools and personal ornaments recovered from graves suggest specialist metalworking and craft differentiation within communities.
Burial practices at Kokcha 3 range from simple interments to more furnished graves, hinting at social differentiation. Grave goods include utilitarian items and personal ornaments, some made from non-local materials, indicating participation in wider exchange networks. There are hints of mobility: isotopic and artifact provenance studies in the region often point to individuals who spent portions of their lives away from birthplaces. However, specific isotopic data for Kokcha 3 remain sparse, so reconstructions of household composition, seasonal movement, and social hierarchy remain provisional.