Excavations on the piedmont sites reveal traces of a Bronze Age lifeway shaped by seasonal rhythms and geographic thresholds. Archaeological features—house remnants, hearths, storage pits, and burials—suggest small, often kin-centered communities exploiting both cultivated plots and natural pasture. Faunal remains from nearby contexts indicate a reliance on sheep, goat and cattle, consistent with mixed herding and low-intensity agriculture. Tools and ceramic fragments point to local craft traditions supplemented by traded goods.
Burial practice varies across the region: some graves show single inhumations with simple grave goods, while others hint at curated objects that traveled across valleys. The material palette—bronze artifacts, shale or stone ornaments, and pottery with regional motifs—evokes a people tied to long-distance exchange networks as well as local lineages.
Archaeological data indicates social organization that may have emphasized patrilineal households and mobile pastoral strategies, but this remains interpretive. Ethnographic analogies and regional comparisons help imagine seasonal movement between lowland fields and upland pastures, yet direct evidence for household size, marriage patterns, or social hierarchy is limited. As always, material remains give shapes and gestures but not full biographies; genetics can help fill some of those blank spaces, especially about mobility and kinship.