Life on the Aleutian edge was sculpted by wind, surf, and the living wealth of the Bering Sea. Archaeological assemblages from Neo‑Aleut sites reveal economies centered on sea mammals, fish, seabirds, and shellfish; middens and bone tools speak to skilled hunting, processing, and maritime technology. Semi‑subterranean dwellings, when present in the record, testify to cold‑air management and communal domestic spaces where food processing, tool production, and social life intersected.
Material culture — carved bone points, toggling harpoons, skin boats (umiaks/baidarkas in later ethnohistoric accounts), and intricately worked basketry — evokes a people adept at navigating stormy waters and seasonal landscapes. Artistic expression appears in utilitarian engraving and small carved objects; ceremonial practices can be inferred from burial placement and grave goods in some secure contexts. Ethnohistoric documents from the 18th century onward record contact, trade, and upheaval following Russian arrival, but archaeological layers preserve a longer story of adaptation and resilience.
Archaeological data indicates that households and kin groups organized resource sharing across islands, yet the fragmented island geography encouraged both local traditions and frequent interisland exchange.