The people designated here as Spain_SE_Iberia_CA lived during the late Chalcolithic of southeastern Iberia, between roughly 3300 and 2146 BCE. Archaeological deposits from cave and rock-shelter sites — notably Camino del Molino (Caravaca, Murcia), Cova d'En Pardo (Planes, Alicante) and Cueva de las Lechuzas (Villena, Alicante) — preserve funerary contexts, pottery styles and occasional copper artefacts that signal a region in transition.
Material culture shows continuity with earlier Neolithic farming communities alongside innovations: more frequent copper tools, modified pottery forms, and rearranged burial practices. These patterns suggest local development rather than wholesale population replacement. Limited evidence points to growing social differentiation: some burials contain richer grave goods and isolated individuals, while many remain modest communal interments.
Archaeological data indicates mobility within the Mediterranean and inland uplands, probably driven by pastoralism, seasonal resources, and emerging exchange in raw materials. While the landscape of southeastern Iberia retains deep Neolithic roots, the Chalcolithic era reveals new social rhythms and technologies that set the stage for later Bronze Age transformations.