The Starčevo-related Neolithic in this dataset unfolds across river valleys and basin edges — from Alsónyék‑Bátaszék and Vörs in Hungary to Donja Strana‑Velesnica (Serbia), Gornja Vrba (Croatia), and Podgorie in Albania. Radiocarbon-calibrated horizons within the range 6223–2459 BCE record the spread of farming lifeways into the Central and Southeastern European landscapes.
Archaeological data indicate these communities adopted domesticated cereals, pulses and caprines, introduced new ceramic vocabularies and created pit‑based household features and small, often ephemeral settlements along tributaries of the Danube and in the Korça Basin. Material signatures linked to the Starčevo horizon — coarse, often impressed pottery, new ground stone toolkits and distinctive settlement traces at sites such as Alsónyék‑Bátaszék and Lánycsók — mark cultural connections that likely trace back toward Anatolian and Aegean Neolithic source populations.
Limited evidence suggests the arrival of these lifeways was episodic and regionally variable: some locations show intensive occupation and long sequences (Alsónyék), while others appear as short-term camps or small farmsteads (Cotatcu, Carcea). The archaeological picture, when combined with genetics, points to migration of agriculturists into these landscapes rather than sole local adoption of farming by foragers, but local interaction and admixture were almost certainly part of the story.