Across the stony shoulders of the Altai, the Late Bronze Age Center West horizon takes shape in the archaeological record as a pattern of raised earthworks and clustered barrows. The three dated burials associated with this dataset—Khudzhirtyn gol I kurgan 2 (Khovd), Biluut 2 barrow 3 (Tsengel, Bayan-Ölgii), and Khudzhirtyn-gol-1 (Üyench District)—fall between 1259 and 917 BCE. Archaeological data indicates these interments were part of a landscape of seasonal movement and territorial markers: low-profile kurgans and isolated barrows often sited on valley margins and river terraces.
Material culture evidence from the broader region suggests continuity of pastoral lifeways in the Late Bronze Age Center West sphere, but explicit artifact links for these specific graves are limited. Radiocarbon dates place these individuals firmly in the later second and early first millennium BCE, a period when highland and valley networks connected the Mongolian Altai with neighboring steppe zones. Limited evidence suggests social display through burial architecture, yet the small sample size and uneven excavation records mean that larger regional patterns remain tentative.