Beneath the limestone shelves of Areni-1 cave in Vayots Dzor province, material culture and human remains illuminate a Chalcolithic horizon between roughly 4350 and 3500 BCE. Archaeological data indicates intense occupation of cave spaces for storage, ritual, and burial, and finds from Areni-1 include tightly dated organic artifacts and craft remains that anchor this community in a network of highland and lowland contacts.
Cinematically, imagine a valley where seasonal herds move across terraced slopes while potters, leatherworkers, and early metallurgists shape the material world. Regional exchange routes likely linked Areni to the Anatolian plateaus, the southern Caucasus, and parts of the Levant. Limited evidence suggests local innovation paired with imported ideas: pottery styles, copper fragments, and food processing residues hint at both continuity from earlier Neolithic farmers and new technical horizons in the Chalcolithic.
Because the genetic sample set for Armenia_C is small (n=5), conclusions about population origins remain tentative. Archaeology provides the scaffold — settlement traces, funerary practice, and craft debris — while ancient DNA offers hints about ancestral mixtures and possible long-distance connections that archaeology alone cannot prove.