Tren Cave, perched in the Devoll valley of southeast Albania, preserves deposits attributed to the Late Neolithic through Chalcolithic (c. 5000–3500 BCE). Archaeological data indicates stratified occupation layers consistent with small, locally rooted communities. Limited excavation and survey in the wider Devoll landscape reveal pottery styles and chipped-stone technologies that echo broader Balkan Neolithic traditions, suggesting cultural connections across the interior Adriatic corridor.
The two genetic samples associated with the label Albania_LN_C derive from this regional context. Their chronology spans a dynamic interval when long-established Neolithic farming lifeways persisted even as new influences began to circulate across the Balkans. Limited evidence suggests continuity of local settlement patterns rather than abrupt population replacement during this window, but uncertainties remain: the Tren Cave dataset is small, and material culture alone cannot resolve complex demographic processes.
Taken together, the archaeological footprint of Tren Cave evokes a landscape of enduring settlements, weaving local traditions into wider Neolithic networks of exchange and shared practice.