Across the windswept basins of central-western Mongolia, monumental stone mounds and khirigsuur tombs mark the Late Bronze Age horizon. Archaeological fieldwork at sites such as Khar Sairiin Am (Bayankhongor), Urgun Shireg Tomb 3 (Uvs), Khoit Tsenkheriin gol barrow 3 (Khovd) and Khavtsal II Tomb 1 (Khövsgöl) reveals repeated reuse of burial mounds and rich mortuary architecture between ca. 1414 and 846 BCE. These stone constructions—often paired with wooden elements and small offerings—reflect a regional practice that ties landscape, ritual, and memory.
Material culture and burial patterns suggest communities rooted in mobile pastoralism with ritual investment in tomb-building. Limited evidence points to local development from earlier Bronze Age traditions in Mongolia rather than wholesale population replacement. Radiocarbon-calibrated dates from the sampled individuals anchor this cultural expression in the central-west landscape during the Late Bronze Age Center West 4 phase. Given the modest sample size, interpretations of population origins remain provisional; however, the spatial clustering of tomb types and repeated burial gestures indicate a shared mortuary idiom across these aimags.