Life in the Miaozigou world likely blended settled tasks with seasonal movement. Archaeological features such as house foundations and storage pits at related regional sites indicate households organized around processing plant foods and craft production. Ground stone tools and pottery forms imply activities like grain processing, cooking, and storage. The visual image is domestic and tactile: hands turning pottery, stones worn smooth by repeated grinding, and smoke from hearths marking the rhythm of days.
Hunting, fishing, and foraging of wild plants probably complemented early cultivation. Faunal remains from the broader northern Chinese Neolithic point to a mixed economy where people exploited deer, boar, and freshwater fish alongside cultivated cereals. Socially, small aggregated settlements and burial practices hint at kin-based groups with emerging differentiation, but extensive hierarchical complexity is not clearly visible in the Miaozigou record.
Material culture and site layout suggest dense local networks of interaction — exchange of pottery styles, lithic raw materials, and possibly ritual objects — connecting Miaozigou communities with neighboring groups. However, archaeological data specific to Miaozigou remains incomplete, and many reconstructions of social life rely on parallels from better-sampled contemporaneous sites.