The daily life of Middle Neolithic communities in France unfolded against a backdrop of fields, riparian gardens and communal ritual. Archaeological excavation at Gurgy, Fleury-sur-Orne and other sites reveals domestic structures, storage pits, and concentrations of animal bone indicating mixed farming of cereals, pulses and domesticated cattle, sheep and pigs. Pottery styles and toolkits speak to daily tasks: grinding, cooking and textile working likely accompanied seasonal rhythms dictated by sowing and harvest.
Burial practices vary across sites. Some graves contain multiple individuals and artefactual assemblages, suggesting differentiated social roles or kin-based burial groups. Durable artifacts — polished stone axes, personal ornaments — point to craft specialization and symbolic expression. At the same time, stable isotope studies from similar regions often show diets dominated by terrestrial staples with modest local variation.
Mobility was neither absent nor unrestricted: skeletal and isotopic evidence from comparable Neolithic contexts indicate local lifetime residence for many individuals, combined with periodic long-distance contacts for exchange or marriage. Archaeological patterns therefore present communities that were rooted in place yet linked by networks of goods, ideas and people.