Archaeological inference places Pacapaccari inhabitants within the textured economies of the high Andes: agriculture adapted to elevation, herding of camelids, and exploitation of vertical ecological zones. While direct botanical or zooarchaeological reports from the three sampled burials are limited, regional LIP patterns in Ayacucho suggest mixed farming of tubers (native potatoes), maize in lower terraces, and reliance on llamas for transport, wool, and meat.
Burials, as the source of the genetic material, offer a window into social identity. Funerary placement, grave goods, and body orientation — where documented in LIP contexts — often reflect household-level decisions and local ritual practice rather than imperial standardization. The small dataset from Pacapaccari cannot robustly reconstruct social hierarchy, but the presence of consistent maternal lineages hints at kin networks centered on matrilineal continuity in household groups.
Daily life would have been shaped by seasonal rhythms, exchange between valley and puna, and the negotiation of resources with neighboring communities. Archaeology paints a scene of communities stitching together resilience through diverse crop assemblages, herding economies, and ritual practices anchored in place — a cinematic highland world of terraces, llamas, and ritual fires that sustained human lives in thin air.