At Mentesh Tepe, everyday life would have unfolded in close quartered houses clustered upon tells: hearths, storage pits, and work surfaces betray a household economy anchored in cultivation, herding, and craft. Archaeological traces from Shulaveri‑Shomutepe contexts across Azerbaijan include pottery styles—simple, often burnished wares—flint and obsidian tools, and evidence for domesticated cereals and caprines. The landscape was worked seasonally and intensively, with orchards and granaries implied by storage features and grinding stones.
Socially, communities likely organized around extended households with ritual and communal spaces. Burials found nearby in comparable sites show varying treatments—single graves and small cemeteries—suggesting emerging social differentiation, though the scale of hierarchy remains uncertain. Exchange networks are visible in portable material and raw materials such as obsidian sourced from distant outcrops, indicating connections across the Caucasus and into Anatolia and the Near East.
Taken together, the archaeological record paints a vivid, tactile world of small farming villages, skilled craftspeople, and regional ties that would later shape Bronze Age societies in the Caucasus.