The Danubian assemblage represented here clusters around tell and lowland settlements of the lower Danube and Transylvanian foothills between c. 5624 and 3026 BCE. Archaeological sites that anchor this group include Gumelnița (Călărași, Oltenița), Pietrele Măgura Gorgana (Giurgiu County), Gârlești (Dolj County, Craiova) and Iclod (Cluj County). These loci belong to a constellation of Eneolithic horizons often labelled Gumelnița, Sălcuța and Iclod cultures — communities known for dense settlements, finely made pottery, and early copper use.
Material culture points to intensive local development: house platforms, molded ceramics with complex motifs, and metalwork indicate craft specialization and growing social complexity. Archaeological data indicates continuity from Neolithic farming traditions with increasing regional interaction across the Danube corridor. Environmental reconstructions and settlement patterns imply reliance on mixed farming, riverine resources, and exchange networks that connected the lower Danube to the Balkans and beyond.
Limited evidence suggests that some stylistic and technological traits arrived via long-distance contacts rather than solely local innovation. Where chronological sequences are well resolved, the middle Chalcolithic — roughly 4500–3500 BCE — marks a floruit of tell-building and inter-community exchange. However, gaps in stratigraphy and uneven sampling mean many origin hypotheses remain provisional.