Archaeological contexts paint BMAC life as both practical and ceremonial. Households clustered within compounds; storage facilities and irrigated fields supported cereals, legumes, and possibly orchard crops. Faunal remains indicate a mixed economy of sheep, goat, cattle, and mobile pastoralism—animals that linked settlements across arid landscapes. Craft workshops produced intricate stone and shell beads, copper objects, and the distinctive painted and burnished pottery that appears across Gonur and Parkhai sites.
Burials vary from simple interments to richly furnished tombs containing ceramics, metalwork, and personal ornaments. Funerary variability implies social differentiation: some graves suggest high-status individuals or households engaged in ritual display. Seals and standardized weights point to administrative practices—perhaps management of irrigation and surplus. Material traces of long-distance trade (marine shell, lapis-like stones, exotic faunal remains) evoke caravans and riverine connections reaching toward the Indus, the Iranian plateau, and beyond.
Archaeological evidence indicates a society negotiated between settlement permanence and regional mobility, where ritual architecture and everyday craft produced a memorable cultural landscape.