The lives reflected in the Uguumur burials were likely shaped by mobility and seasonal rhythms. Archaeological indicators in the wider Selenge landscape—pasture use, corrals, and hearth remains recorded in surveys—point to herding of horses, sheep, goats, and cattle as the economic backbone. People moved with the herds between river valleys and higher pastures, forging social networks that could span hundreds of kilometres.
Burial evidence from the broader region suggests a blend of funerary practices, sometimes emphasizing mounted status, animal offerings, or distinctive grave goods that signal rank and identity. Such practices imply social differentiation within mobile communities and connections to wider steppe institutions of power typical of Xiongnu and later medieval polities. Archaeobotanical and faunal analyses elsewhere in northern Mongolia indicate diets dominated by animal products, supplemented by gathered plants and traded grains.
Craft activities—leatherworking, bone and metalworking—would have been performed in seasonal camps or near permanent water sources. Exchange networks, both local and long-distance, brought prestige goods and raw materials, enabling aesthetic and technological choices that linked Selenge inhabitants to a broader Eurasian web. While Uguumur Uul provides only a narrow spotlight, combined archaeological data paints a picture of resilient, mobile communities adapting to environmental and political shifts.