The Usatove-related assemblage at Majaky sits on the windswept littoral of the northwestern Black Sea. Archaeological data indicates a cultural horizon bridging inland steppe traditions and maritime networks of the Black Sea littoral during the late Eneolithic to early Bronze Age (context dated here to 2911–2573 BCE). Usatove settlements and cemeteries have been documented across southwestern Ukraine, often associated with rich grave goods, pottery types that echo both steppe and Balkan forms, and signs of long-distance exchange.
At Majaky (Odesa District), material traces — burial features and imported-style pottery — suggest a community engaged with coastal trade, fishing, and pastoral lifeways. The horizon likely emerged from a mosaic of influences: local Eneolithic traditions, incoming steppe groups, and contacts with the Balkans and the northern Black Sea islands. Archaeological evidence indicates increasing social differentiation in some Usatove contexts, visible in selective grave wealth and mound burials, but patterns vary regionally.
Limited osteological and contextual samples from Majaky mean that reconstructions remain cautious: stylistic affinities and settlement patterns point to a community negotiating land and sea resources, but many details of origins, migration, and interaction remain debated among specialists.