The lone individual from Podgorie sits at the threshold of the Albanian Early Neolithic, dated to c. 6223–6067 BCE. Archaeological data indicates that the Korça Basin became part of the westward sweep of early farming lifeways that transformed the Balkans after the spread of domesticated plants and animals from Anatolia. At sites across southeastern Europe this period is characterised by the appearance of sedentary settlements, new pottery traditions, and the reorganization of landscapes for cereal cultivation and herding.
Limited evidence from Podgorie itself prevents a full reconstruction of community origins, but regional parallels—material culture and settlement patterns found elsewhere in the Balkan Early Neolithic—suggest connections to wider Anatolian-derived farming networks. The picture that emerges is cinematic: riverside clearings repurposed into fields, timber houses clustered against the upland ridges, and the slow reweaving of human lifeways away from foraging toward cultivation. However, with only one genomic sample from Podgorie, any claim about population origins or migration pathways must remain provisional and framed within the broader archaeological context of the region.