Life on Long Island would have been framed by the sea: fishermen and shellfish gatherers left dense middens whose layered shells and fish bone trace seasonal harvests. Pottery vessels — cooking pots, bowls, and storage jars — appear in domestic contexts and hint at household economies organized around communal food preparation, starch-rich foods (likely manioc/cassava and tubers), and marine resources.
Archaeological features at Rolling Heads and Clarence Town include postholes and hearths that suggest compact hamlets of wooden structures, while grave contexts (where preserved) provide glimpses of social practice. Tools of shell, bone, and stone reflect daily crafts: net weights, fishhooks, and ground-stone implements for plant processing. Trade and movement between islands are visible in portable artifacts and ceramic stylistic echoes, implying seasonal or permanent inter-island voyages in dugout canoes.
Social life was likely flexible and responsive to environmental rhythms: kin-based households anchored settlements, while broader ritual and exchange networks connected Long Island to the wider Caribbean world. Yet archaeological preservation is uneven, and many aspects of social hierarchy, belief, and language remain inferential rather than certain.