Settlements With the exception of some inland settlements such as the
Alvastra pile-dwelling, the settlements are located near those of the previous Ertebølle culture on the coast. It was characterized by single-family
daubed houses c. 12 m x 6 m.
Economy Studies on plant use at Funnel Beaker sites are biased by the scarcity of sites with waterlogged preservation. Based on analysis from northern Germany, Denmark, Sweden and the Netherlands, the state of the art is that the crop analyses show assemblages that are dominated by
Hordeum vulgare var. nudum (naked barley) and
Triticum turgidum ssp. dicoccum (Triticum dicoccum, emmer). Moreover,
Triticum monococcum ssp. monococcum (Triticum monococcum, einkorn) and
Triticum aestivum ssp. aestivum and/or
Triticum turgidum ssp. durum/turgidum (Triticum aestivum/Triticum turgidum, free-threshing wheat) frequently occur in small quantities.
Triticum durum/turgidum (hard/rivet wheat) has been demonstrated at Frydenlund and in
Albersdorf. Oil plants
Linum usitatissimum (linseed) and
Papaver somniferum ssp. setigerum (opium poppy) occur very scarcely, and mostly from the Middle Neolithic (c. 3300 BCE) onwards. In Frydenlund, Funen, Denmark, the grinding stones were used to grind wild plants only. In
Oldenburg, Germany, grain was processed. In Frydenlund, the absence of cereal grinding combined and an abundance of carbonised cereals from soil samples indicates that probably grain was processed to a porridge-like meal.
Technology in middle and northern Europe. One example is the engraving on a ceramic tureen from
Bronocice in Poland on the northern edge of the Beskidy Mountains (northern Carpathian ring), which is indirectly dated to the time span from 3636 to 3373 BCE and is the oldest evidence for covered carriages in Central Europe. They were drawn by cattle, presumably oxen whose remains were found with the pot. Today it is housed in the Archaeological Museum of Cracow (
Muzeum Archeologiczne w Krakowie), Poland. At
Flintbek in northern Germany cart tracks dating from c. 3400 BCE were discovered underneath a megalithic long barrow. This is the earliest known direct evidence for wheeled vehicles in the world (i.e. not models or images). The Funnel Beaker Culture is associated with skilfully crafted objects such as flint axes or battle axes. File:0854 Ein Krug aus Bronocice, 3.550 v. Chr..JPG|The
Bronocice Pot, Poland, c. 3500-3350 BCE. File:Wazazbronocic.svg|Wheeled vehicle representation on the Bronocice pot File:02020 1825 Figürchen ein paar Ochsen aus Bytyń, östliche Gruppe von TRB.jpg|
Arsenical bronze ox figurines from
Bytyń, Poland, 4th mill. BCE. File:Kupferschatz von Osnabrück Kupferaxt 1.jpg|Copper axe from
Lüstringen, Germany, c. 4000 BCE File:Aufsicht Streitaxt Wangels.jpg|A double axe found in a megalithic tomb
Graves Houses were centered on a monumental grave, a symbol of social cohesion. Burial practices were varied depending on region and changed over time.
Inhumation seems to have been the rule. The oldest graves consisted of wooden
chambered cairns inside long barrows, but were later made in the form of
passage graves and
dolmens. Originally, the structures were probably covered with a mound of earth and the entrance was blocked by a stone. Before medieval and modern church building required stone, and before modern land use began, the number of megaliths in northern Germany and southern Scandinavia was much higher than today. In Denmark, 2,800 monuments have been recorded, and about 7,300 other examples existed. In northern Germany,
Johannes Müller reports 11,658 known monuments. He assumes that about 75,000 megaliths were originally constructed. The Funnelbeaker culture marks the appearance of megalithic tombs at the coasts of the Baltic and of the North sea, an example of which are the
Sieben Steinhäuser in northern
Germany. The megalithic structures of Ireland, France and Portugal are somewhat older and have been connected to earlier archeological cultures of those areas. At graves, the people sacrificed ceramic vessels that contained food along with amber jewelry and flint-axes. Genetic analysis of several dozen individuals found in the Funnelbeaker passage grave Frälsegården in Sweden suggest that these burials were based on a
patrilineal social organisation, with the vast majority of males being ultimately descended from a single male ancestor while the women were mostly unrelated who presumably married into the family. ==Ethnicity==