The Shulaveri–Shomutepe horizon unfolds like a ribbon of settlements across the southern Caucasus. Archaeological data indicates Mentesh Tepe (Tovuz district, western Azerbaijan) participates in a wider Neolithic–Chalcolithic constellation dated roughly to c. 6000–4000 BCE. Excavations at Mentesh Tepe reveal stratified hearths, compact domestic architecture and a pottery tradition that echoes neighboring lowland sites. These material signatures suggest a settled, agrarian lifeway emerging from local hunter‑gatherer roots blended with incoming farming knowledge.
Limited evidence suggests the community at Mentesh Tepe engaged in long‑distance exchange: obsidian and stylistic parallels point toward ties with Anatolia and the Armenian Highlands. Archaeological assemblages indicate technological innovation — pottery styles, ground stone tools, and early craft specializations — without clear markers of large‑scale population replacement. The cinematic sweep of layered houses, smoke‑blackened floors and fields beyond the tell speaks to decades of continuity punctuated by episodic contact.
Because chronology in the South Caucasus is complex, some researchers extend Shulaveri–Shomutepe cultural traits into later Chalcolithic and Bronze Age phases. At Mentesh Tepe the surviving context allows us to trace the archaeology that frames the few genetic samples we have: a local community embedded in regional networks, forming one chapter in a long, mutable human story.