Perched on the shifting margins of the northwestern Black Sea, the Usatove horizon at Bolšoj Kujalnik represents a coastal expression of Late Eneolithic lifeways. Archaeological data indicates occupation between 3973 and 3528 BCE, a period of dynamic contact across the Pontic littoral. The site lies in present-day Odessa Oblast and typifies settlements and funerary deposits attributed to the broader Usatove cultural phenomenon.
Material traces—coastal settlements, curated pottery assemblages, and burials with varied grave goods—suggest communities that combined farming, animal herding and exploitation of marine and estuarine resources. Artefactual links to neighboring regions imply exchange networks reaching inland river valleys and possibly the northern Aegean/Balkan seaboard; however, the precise direction and intensity of those contacts remain debated.
Limited evidence suggests social differentiation in death rites at Bolšoj Kujalnik: grave complexity and associated objects vary within the cemetery, hinting at emerging hierarchies or differentiated access to long-distance goods. Archaeological interpretations of origin stress both local continuity from earlier forager-farmer mixtures in the north Pontic zone and renewed inputs from neighboring Eneolithic and Chalcolithic communities. Given the small number of well-dated samples from the site, models of population movement and cultural transmission should be regarded as provisional.