The river plain and terrace landscapes of the Lech offered mixed opportunities: fields for cereals, meadows for grazing, and river channels for fish and transport. Archaeological finds — pottery sherds, flint tools, and occasional copper fragments — suggest communities engaged in small-scale mixed agriculture, pastoralism, and craft exchange. Settlements are often ephemeral in the current record; much of what we infer comes from burial assemblages where personal items reveal aspects of identity, status, and connections.
Graves at Haunstetten and Augsburg frequently contain bell-beaker pottery, sometimes accompanied by pins, stone tools, or metal objects. These items speak to personal display and networks of exchange. Workshops for flint and metalworking are not strongly represented at every site, but imported copper and finished objects indicate participation in broader trade routes that connected the Lech Valley to alpine and lowland resources.
Social organization likely combined kin-based households with emerging long-distance alliances. The archaeological record indicates varied burial treatments and grave goods, suggesting social differentiation but not uniform hierarchies. Seasonal mobility — moving herds or following resource cycles — may have complemented settled farming, a pattern consistent with many river-valley communities of the later third millennium BCE.