Archaeological evidence from Middle Neolithic Portugal paints an intimate portrait: households oriented to small-scale cereal cultivation, herding of sheep and goats, and continued reliance on rivers and the Atlantic for fish and shellfish. Pottery and tools hint at domestic tasks—cooking, storage, textile production—and at regional networks that carried ideas and objects along river corridors and shorelines.
Mortuary deposits at sites like Lorga de Din and Lugar do Canto, though not always extensively published, suggest localized burial practices that preserved skeletal remains useful for aDNA work. Skeletal assemblages from the region often show a life shaped by labor: robust limbs from repetitive activity, tooth wear from gritty diets, and occasional markers of trauma or stress. Social organization was likely kin-based and small-scale, with communal ties mediated by seasonal rounds and exchange. But crucially, these inferences rest on combined archaeological patterns across western Iberia, and the specific behaviors of the six sampled individuals must be interpreted cautiously.