Banla Mountain, perched in the rolling loess and river terraces near Chaoyang city, is a quiet archive of human lives from the Middle Neolithic West Liao River tradition. Archaeological data indicates settlement and ritual activity here between 3550 and 3050 BCE, within a broader web of communities exploiting riverine resources and early cultivation of millet. Excavations have recovered pottery sherds, hearths and pit features that align with regional Neolithic assemblages along the West Liao River basin.
Limited evidence suggests these communities were neither isolated nor monolithic: material styles point to interaction spheres stretching across northeastern China, while the environmental setting implies seasonal scheduling between upland hunting and lowland cultivation. The cinematic image of smoke and small hearths against a cold northern sky evokes a people adapting to a temperate landscape, where food production and foraging coexisted.
Caution is required: with only three ancient DNA samples from Banla Mountain, inferences about population origins must remain tentative. Archaeology provides the cultural framework—pottery, pits, and settlement patterns—while genetic data begins to sketch biological relationships with later and neighboring groups. Together, they offer complementary views of emergence, movement and local persistence in the Middle Neolithic West Liao River world.