Archaeological remains from Serra Crabiles evoke a coastal world of stone-built yards, hearth-focused homes, and ceramics tempered for cooking and storage. The material culture suggests mixed subsistence: cereal cultivation, herding, and exploitation of coastal resources such as shellfish and fish. Tools and ornamentation found in the site’s contexts point to specialized craft practices — pottery finishing, stone tool knapping, and bone working — likely organized at household and small-community scales.
Burial evidence, where present, indicates varied funerary behaviors and potential social differentiation, though the sample is small. Grave goods are modest, emphasizing everyday life over ostentatious display. Spatial patterns hint at kin-linked households clustered across the settlement. Archaeobotanical and zooarchaeological indicators (where recovered) suggest seasonal scheduling of activities tied to maritime and pastoral cycles. These lived rhythms, preserved in the soil and bones, are now being read alongside DNA data to trace family ties, mobility, and the transmission of craft and ritual knowledge across generations.