Archaeological data indicates that the people represented by the Tren Cave samples lived during the Late Neolithic to Chalcolithic transition in southeastern Albania (c. 5000–3500 BCE). Tren Cave sits in the Devoll valley, a corridor linking inland Balkan uplands with Adriatic and Aegean coasts. The broader region shows a long arc of Neolithic farming traditions introduced from Anatolia and then transformed locally over millennia.
Limited evidence suggests that communities here practiced mixed farming, ceramic production, and increasingly visible metallurgy by the later end of this range. Material culture in nearby sites points to continuity with Early and Middle Neolithic farmer groups alongside local adaptations. Genetically, such populations in the Balkans often combine Anatolian farmer ancestry with varying amounts of local European hunter-gatherer input; however, the Tren Cave dataset is small and cannot alone define regional origins.
The Tren Cave individuals therefore offer a tantalizing, if preliminary, glimpse into the human tapestry of the Devoll valley: a place where incoming farming lifeways blended with long-standing local traditions, setting the stage for social and technological changes that culminated in the Chalcolithic.