The Netherlands_MBA assemblage (1620–932 BCE) sits within the Middle Bronze Age landscape of the low countries, a time when coastal wetlands, riverine marshes and reclaimed peatlands framed human life. Archaeological data indicate an intensification of local settlement and long‑distance exchange during this period, with metal objects and raw materials moving along North Sea and inland waterways.
Samples derive from five specific localities in the western Netherlands: Westwoud‑Binnenwijzend and Hoogkarspel‑Houterpolder‑West (Noord‑Holland), Velsen‑Hofgeesterweg and Wervershoof‑Zwaagdijk (Noord‑Holland), and Vlaardingen‑Krabbeplas (Zuid‑Holland). Radiocarbon and contextual dates place these burials and depositions between c.1620 and 932 BCE, a span that overlaps regional shifts in burial practice and craft specialization.
Archaeological evidence suggests these communities were neither isolated nor static: trade routes and occasional migration introduced new material styles and techniques. At the same time, local lifeways adapted to waterlogged landscapes, promoting small, mobile hamlets and specialized economy. Limited sample size and uneven preservation mean that models of origin remain provisional; however, the combined archaeological and genetic picture points to a population rooted in local traditions but open to wider Bronze Age networks.