The archaeology of southern Sweden during the TRB evokes a landscape of small farmsteads, ritual embayments, and communal gathering places. Pottery with comb impressions, polished stone axes, and traces of cereal agriculture point to an economy blending cultivation, animal husbandry, and foraging. Hindby mosse, in particular, reads like a stage set for communal acts: deposits, arranged stones, and concentrations of artifacts suggest repeated gatherings, feasting, or rites rather than simply domestic occupation.
At Frälsegården, burial features and associated material culture offer glimpses of social identities—life cycles marked by deposition, care for the dead, and the display of crafted objects. Craftsmanship in pottery and polished stone implies skilled specialists operating within small, interlinked communities. Seasonal rhythms—harvest, animal birthing, fishing—would have structured daily life, while long‑distance exchange networks brought exotic materials and ideas into southern Sweden.
Archaeological data indicates variability across settlements: some were firmly rooted in local tradition, others adopted new practices from neighboring regions. These lived rhythms—household work, ritual performance, and exchange—are the human backdrop to the genetic signals preserved in ancient DNA.