The tribe traditionally lived in sedentary villages in the valley due to the suitable climate and abundant food supply.
They were a maize-based agricultural society who lived in sedentary villages and built ceremonial platform mounds.
The first sedentary villages were established around fresh water springs and lakes in the Levantine corridor by the Natufian culture.
The Kayapớ lived in sedentary villages and were proficient in pottery and loom-weaving, yet they did not domesticate animals or poses knowledge on metallurgy.
The earliest inhabitants here hunter-gatherers; however over time, many developed sedentary agricultural villages by the end of the Pre Classic period .
Mexico is the site of the domestication of maize and beans which caused a transition from paleo-Indian hunter-gatherers to sedentary agricultural villages beginning around 7000 BCE.
By 2000 BCE, agriculture had been established in the Central Valleys region of the state, with sedentary villages.
This prehistoric group from the Early Agricultural Period, grew corn, lived year round in sedentary villages and developed sophisticated irrigation canals.
It is believed that Kaladjan Koulibaly, founder of the Bambara Kingdom's Koulibaly dynasty established the first sedentary villages here at his time.
She tries to trace the evolution of the village once food technology is introduced and making it a permanent, sedentary village.