Along the fertile floodplain of the Lech River, between the rising towns of Augsburg and small hamlets such as Königsbrunn and Wehringen, a distinct Bell Beaker presence emerges around 2800 BCE. Archaeological data indicates characteristic bell-shaped pottery, individual grave goods, and occasional metal objects appearing in local funerary contexts at sites like Augsburg — Hugo-Eckener-Straße and Haunstetten (Unterer Talweg). The material culture suggests lively connections across Central Europe: stylistic traits of vessels and copper items point to long-distance exchange networks, while settlement traces imply mixed farming economies adapted to riverine landscapes.
Limited evidence suggests this presence was not a single colonizing wave but a series of interactions and movements. Radiocarbon dates from graves and associated contexts cluster broadly between c. 2800 and 2200 BCE, with continuity into later phases up to c. 1800 BCE at some localities. Archaeological data indicates local adaptation of Bell Beaker practices — funerary rites and pottery styles were integrated into pre-existing Neolithic traditions rather than uniformly replacing them.
Key uncertainties remain: site preservation varies across Augsburg and Haunstetten, and taphonomic processes have removed much of the domestic record. As with many regional Bell Beaker expressions, the Lech Valley story reads as a mosaic of adoption, mobility, and local continuity rather than a single, neat migration.