In the hush of ancient valleys, daily life for Early Neolithic people around Pendimoun would have been shaped by the rhythms of planting, herding, and coastal foraging. Archaeological indicators from comparable Early Neolithic sites in southern France include simple domestic structures, hearths, pottery for storage and cooking, and stone tools for cereal processing — a material signature of sedentism and agricultural dependence.
Seasonal cycles anchored community life: sowing and harvest, birthing of sheep and goats, and the maintenance of harvesting tools. Shell middens and coastal resources likely supplemented diets, while trade networks carried pottery styles and raw materials. Socially, small kin groups or extended households probably formed the core units, with burial practices at Pendimoun hinting at localized ritual behavior centered on the dead.
Because only three genetic samples are available from Pendimoun, inferences about social structure, mobility, and kinship remain tentative. However, the combination of farming technologies and continued use of wild resources implies a flexible adaptation strategy — not a wholesale replacement of earlier lifeways but a creative blending that allowed communities to thrive along varied Mediterranean ecologies.
Archaeology thus suggests a world of hands in earth and fleece, of communal tasks and seasonal labor, staged against a striking coastal landscape where new lifeways were being rehearsed and refined.