The bones and pottery recovered from Jiaozuoniecun (Jiazuo city) and Haojiatai (Shicaozhao village, Luohe) sit like fossils in the loess — layered sediments spoken to by the Yellow River. Archaeological data indicates these sites were occupied during a long span from the Late Bronze Age into the Iron Age (roughly 1550–48 BCE), a time of technological shifts: bronze metallurgy matures, iron begins to appear, and settled agrarian communities intensify along fertile river valleys.
Material culture — including ceramic forms, burial arrangements, and metallurgical debris — ties these assemblages to broader central China developments after the Shang period and during regional Zhou transformations. Limited evidence suggests local continuity rather than wholesale population replacement: grave goods and settlement patterns reflect long-term adaptation to riverine agriculture, millet and wheat cultivation, and seasonal mobility.
Because direct ancient DNA samples from these sites are few (six individuals), the narrative of origin remains cautious. Archaeology frames a scene of evolving social complexity in Henan; genetics offers initial glimpses that largely align with an East Asian regional signature but require more samples to confirm migration, admixture, or social stratification processes with confidence.