Across the cool, birch‑lined plains north of the Volga, communities tied to the Fatyanovo phenomenon established footholds between ca. 2900 and 2200 BCE. Archaeological data indicates links to the broader Corded‑Ware horizon that swept east from central Europe: distinctive ceramics and mobility patterns suggest incoming pastoralist groups met local forest‑steppe populations. Key sites in this dataset — Naumovskoye, Khaldeevo, Voronkovo, Nikultsino, Goluzinovo and the village complex at Volosovo‑Danilovo (Danilovsky District, Yaroslavl Oblast) — preserve the material traces of this encounter.
Limited evidence suggests that the Yaroslavl Fatyanovo communities were not simple colonists: they appear as frontier groups adapting steppe lifeways to a heavily wooded environment. Radiocarbon dates cluster within the given range, and settlement traces indicate seasonal mobility and resource exploitation of both river corridors and forest margins. While connections to the Fatyanovo archaeological horizon are clear in material culture, the precise processes of migration, admixture and local adoption remain under active study and should be treated with caution.