Daily life in Middle Neolithic Lingolsheim can be imagined from the trace evidence: compact houses or longhouses set near fields, domestic animals grazing nearby, and pottery vessels used for cooking, storage and communal meals. Archaeological data indicates craft specialization in stone and pottery, while wear on bone and stone tools suggests activities of harvesting, hide working and woodworking.
Burial customs, inferred from the recovered remains and regional parallels, may have been modest but meaningful: small funerary deposits, body positioning and associated grave goods that tie individuals to kin groups and local landscapes. Social life probably combined household autonomy with networked exchange — trade of fine flints, pottery styles and perhaps ritual ideas across the Upper Rhine corridor.
The Lingolsheim assemblage hints at variability in diet and mobility. Stable isotope studies in the region (not necessarily on these three samples) often show diets dominated by domesticated cereals and animal protein with local foraging supplements. Yet, given the very small sample set from Lingolsheim, these portrayals remain provisional and evocative, inviting further excavation and analysis.