The story of Asparn‑Schletz unfurls at the edge of the first great wave of farming that moved into Central Europe. Archaeological data indicates the site belongs to the Linear Pottery Culture (LBK), an early Neolithic horizon that spread from the Danube corridor and Anatolian-derived farming communities into the loess plains. Radiocarbon-calibrated contexts at Asparn‑Schletz place occupation in the mid-6th millennium BCE (the sample here dates to 5626–5525 BCE), a time when timber longhouses, patterned ceramics, and organized fields transformed the landscape.
Excavations at Asparn‑Schletz have revealed defensive earthworks and human remains in clustered burial deposits. Limited evidence suggests episodes of violent conflict or catastrophic mortality at the site, a sobering counterpoint to the image of steady agricultural expansion. These material traces—settlement layouts, enclosures, and skeletal trauma—are the archaeological stage on which the genetic actors begin to appear. While broad LBK origins point to migrating early farmers of Anatolian ancestry, local interactions with resident hunter-gatherers become visible at the micro-level through both bones and genomes.