Västerbjers evokes a maritime rhythm: small communities anchored to bays and skerries, where boats, nets and spears sustained a diet rich in fish, seal and seabirds. Zooarchaeological remains from Pitted Ware contexts on Gotland consistently show a reliance on marine protein, and midden deposits suggest seasonal aggregation for communal feasting and exchange. Shellfish beds and coastal wetlands provided predictable resources that structured settlement and mobility.
Craft traditions are visible in the pottery — pitted and combed surfaces that may have aided handling and drying — and in finely made bone and antler implements. Social life likely centered on kin groups with flexible cooperation for seafaring and hunting. Graves at Västerbjers, where present, sometimes contain personal items and weapons, hinting at individual status or roles within maritime economies. Interaction with Battle Axe-associated groups introduced new objects and perhaps new social practices: axes, certain flint tool types, and possibly changes in exchange networks.
Archaeological data indicates households were small and maritime specializations prominent, but communal ritual and intergroup interaction appear important. The coastal landscape is both a lifeway and a stage for cultural negotiation, where identities were performed through pottery, boatcraft and burial practice.