Archaeological remains from Nqoma suggest a rhythm of life shaped by herding, seasonal cultivation, and craft production. Pottery sherds recovered from habitation layers display tempered fabrics and decoration motifs consistent with contemporaneous sites across southeastern Botswana, indicating shared ceramic traditions and possibly mobile craft knowledge. Iron slag and fragments of simple tools imply local smelting and smithing activities — technologies that transformed agricultural efficiency and craft repertoire.
Domestic landscapes likely clustered around water sources and grazing grounds. Animal bone assemblages from nearby Early Iron Age contexts typically show cattle as an economic focus, augmented by sheep, goats, and wild game. Such economies supported social practices where cattle functioned as wealth, bridewealth, and symbolic capital. Houses were probably ephemeral or semi-permanent, leaving light structural traces in the archaeological record, which complicates reconstructions of settlement size and hierarchy at Nqoma.
Funerary evidence in the region is uneven; where burials are found, they can include grave goods that reflect status, craft specialization, or long-distance contacts. At Nqoma, the single genomic sample provides a rare biological anchor to these material traces, but it cannot by itself reveal household structures, ritual practices, or status systems. Archaeological inference therefore relies on combining this genetic hint with broader regional patterns.