At the cusp of the seventh millennium BCE, the open loess plains and river valleys of what is now Inner Mongolia began to host human groups experimenting with new subsistence strategies. Archaeological data from the Yumin locality in Huade (Ulanqab prefecture) reveal Early Neolithic occupation layers dating to roughly 6370–6110 BCE. Material traces are sparse but evocative: hearths, flaked stone tools, and ephemeral features that speak of seasonal camps or small, mobile hamlets rather than dense, long-lived villages.
Cinematic landscapes of grass and sky would have shaped lifeways here: groups moving with the rhythm of wild cereals, game, and riverine resources. Limited evidence suggests local innovation in lithic technology and possible early use of plant resources familiar across Northeast Asia. These inland Early Neolithic communities appear distinct from contemporaneous coastal or riverine centers, likely reflecting an adaptation to continental climates and a network of small, interacting groups rather than a single, unified culture.
Because the archaeological record in this part of Inner Mongolia is fragmentary, any reconstruction must be cautious. Radiocarbon dates anchored to stratified contexts provide the temporal frame, but the cultural narrative remains provisional. This is a story assembled from few voices in the deep past, each one precious and partial.