Life across the Albania_BA_IA landscape would have been textured — salt-scented breezes along the coast, shepherds on limestone slopes, and the steady hammering of metalworkers who began to test iron alongside bronze. Excavations at Dukat reveal maritime connections: imported or regionally traded ceramics and worked metals that imply craft specialists and coastal exchange. In contrast, Çinamak in the Kukës highlands preserves traces of transhumant economies: seasonal movement of flocks, simple storage architecture, and burials reflecting local lineage groups.
Burial practices are variable: some interments show grave goods suggesting status differentiation, while others are modest, indicating a spectrum of social complexity rather than rigid hierarchy. Craft production — pottery, weaving, and metallurgy — would have anchored communities, supported by mixed agriculture of cereals, pulses, and domesticated animals. Archaeobotanical and faunal remains are limited for these specific sites; archaeological data indicates a reliance on both terrestrial and maritime resources. Communities likely balanced local traditions with new technologies and materials arriving via regional networks, producing a cultural landscape both resilient and receptive to change.