Archaeological traces paint a picture of island lifeways shaped by sea and stone. At Grotta Colombi, the cave burial context evokes intimate funerary practices—interments placed within sheltered coastal hollows that double as mnemonic landscapes. Bonnanaro's cemetery deposits reveal domestic assemblages nearby: coarse ceramics, bone tools, and spindle whorls that suggest textile production and household economies.
Subsistence strategies likely combined pastoralism, small-scale agriculture, and fishing. Sardinian topography funnels communities into fertile valleys and accessible coasts; archaeological data indicates that settlements clustered around reliable freshwater and grazing land. Trade and mobility are visible in exotic objects and non-local raw materials, but their frequency is low in these assemblages, implying limited but meaningful connections to wider Mediterranean networks.
Socially, burial variability—cave inhumations versus surface cemeteries—may reflect kinship, status, or local custom. Grave goods are modest, emphasizing daily craft and subsistence tools over lavish display. Cinematically, the remains conjure a society rooted in place, where kin ties and landscape memory mattered as much as distant contacts. Still, with the small number of sampled individuals, any reconstruction of social structure remains provisional.