The Romania_N assemblage represents Neolithic communities active in Muntenia between roughly 6000 and 4300 BCE. Archaeological data indicates that the onset of farming in this part of the lower Danube was part of a broader southeast-to-northwest movement of Neolithic lifeways that introduced domesticated plants and animals, new pottery traditions, and sedentary villages into the region. Sites included in this dataset — Popesti‑Vasilati (Vasilai/Cilira), the Cârcea Viaduct locality, Garleti, and Urziceni — preserve house platforms, pottery sherds, flaked stone tools, and burial contexts typical of early farming settlements. Material culture suggests close contact with neighboring Neolithic groups in the Balkans and the Carpathian basin, while local adaptations to the floodplain landscapes of the lower Danube are visible in settlement placement and resource use.
Limited evidence suggests continuity in settlement locations across generations, but demographic trajectories, social organization, and the timing of cultural transitions remain partially obscure. Because the genetic sample count is small (five individuals), any reconstruction of population movements or cultural origins must be treated as provisional and contextualized alongside ongoing excavations and comparative regional datasets.