The Baalberge presence at Makotrasy (central Bohemia) sits within the wider Chalcolithic horizon of Central Europe dated c. 4300–3500 BCE. Archaeological data indicates village occupation, distinctive pottery forms, and burial practices that align with the Baalberge cultural sphere. The material culture—handmade and burnished ceramics, occasional copper objects, and certain burial rites—speaks to a community negotiating local traditions and new influences across river valleys and upland plateaus.
Genetic data from 20 individuals recovered at Makotrasy add a human dimension to the material record. Observed Y-chromosome and mitochondrial haplogroups suggest a tapestry of ancestries: some lineages are commonly associated with earlier European hunter–gatherers and Neolithic farmers, while others point to wider connections that may include northerly or eastern contacts. Limited evidence suggests that Baalberge groups maintained regional continuity in settlement and subsistence while participating in long-distance social networks.
Uncertainty remains. The archaeological record is fragmentary and the genetic sample—though useful—is modest. Interpretations must therefore balance the evocative picture of cultural emergence with caution: patterns visible at Makotrasy may reflect local particularities rather than a uniform Baalberge lifeway across Central Europe.