Archaeological traces paint a cinematic, if partial, portrait of daily life: small bands moving seasonally along rocky coasts and inland valleys, exploiting fish, shellfish, and coastal game while hunting terrestrial herbivores inland. Hearths, tool scatters, and worked shell or pigment fragments recovered from Epigravettian contexts in Sicily indicate dense activity areas within caves like San Teodoro. Personal adornment and ochre use—common in Late Palaeolithic contexts—suggest identities shaped by social ties, mobility, and long-distance exchange.
Settlement patterns likely alternated between caves that provided shelter and open-air camps tied to resource patches. Social organization was probably flexible and kin-based, with group sizes adapted to resource availability and seasonality. Skilled flintknapping and composite tools enabled efficient hunting, while coastal resources buffered communities during climatic instability. However, the archaeological record in Sicily remains limited: preservation biases and a small number of well-dated sites mean many aspects of social complexity—ritual behavior, detailed seasonal calendars, and inter-group alliances—remain only partially resolved.