Archaeological contexts in the Late Neolithic–Chalcolithic Balkans paint a vivid picture of everyday life: settled farming, domesticated animals, ceramic craft, and expanding exchange networks. In the Devoll valley, fertile riverine soils would have supported cereals and pulses, while upland meadows favored sheep and goats. Pottery styles, stone tools, and emerging copper use reflect both local innovation and long-distance contacts.
Caves such as Tren may have had multiple roles—seasonal shelter, ritual space, or deposition places for human remains and material offerings—depending on the site and period. Archaeological deposits nearby show household activities interleaved with specialized craft and communal practices, suggesting communities balanced kin-based farms with wider social ties. Mobility likely included short-distance herding movements and episodic exchanges of raw materials like obsidian or copper.
While evocative, these reconstructions rest on regional parallels; Tren Cave itself provides only two sampled individuals, so reconciling individual life histories with broader social patterns requires more data.