Along the wind-swept shores of Gotland, bands of people assembled pottery stamped with pits, hunted seals and fish, and buried their dead in stone settings that still punctuate the coastline. Archaeological data indicates the Pitted Ware groups in Sweden (often grouped as Sweden_PWC) emerged around 3100 BCE as a maritime adaptation during the later Neolithic and into the Early Bronze Age horizon. Key sites include Ajvide and the small islets such as Stora Karlsö, where midden deposits, grave fields, and habitation traces preserve seasonal camps and ritual places.
Material culture — shell middens, characteristic pitted pottery, and hunting gear — points to a lifeway oriented to the sea and rocky coasts rather than inland agriculture. Limited evidence suggests continuity with earlier Mesolithic coastal populations in both economy and certain artifact types, though contacts with farming communities and mobility across the Baltic are archaeologically documented. Because the dataset is small and preservation varies, interpretations of population continuity, migration, and cultural transmission remain cautious and subject to refinement as more finds and genetic data appear.