Archaeological traces from the Erdaojingzi locality suggest everyday life shaped by seasonal cycles and riverine resources. Millet cultivation dominates botanical assemblages across the West Liao River Late Neolithic, implying dedicated processing and storage practices — grindstones, storage pits, and varied vessel types speak to a cereal-oriented economy. Animal bones from nearby sites show a mix of domesticated taxa and wild game, pointing to diversified diets and flexible subsistence strategies.
Household remains, cremation and inhumation burials, and grave goods recorded in regional excavations imply social differentiation: some burials contain utilitarian pottery or ornaments, while others show minimal accoutrements. Ceramic styles and decoration patterns connect Erdaojingzi communities to broader stylistic networks that extend into northeastern China, suggesting exchange of ideas or marriage ties across valleys. Seasonal mobility for pasturing animals may have complemented sedentary farming, creating a social rhythm of fields, herds, and riverine trade.
Material culture evokes sensory landscapes: the scrape of millet husks, the smoke-streaked interiors of longhouses or pit-houses, and footprints trailing to riverbanks. Yet the archaeological record is fragmentary, and direct inference about social institutions, ritual practice, or household size at Erdaojingzi remains cautious without more extensive excavation and sampling.