The largest settlement was Daimabad, which had a mud fortification during this period, as well as an elliptical temple with fire pits.
Some settlements show evidence of planning in the layout of rectangular houses and streets or lanes.
Agriculture was largely the same as the earlier Malwa culture, including wheat, barley, and legumes, but with the addition of new kinds of millet.
The people traded with Karnataka for gold and ivory, and with coastal India (Gujarat and Konkan) for fish, conch shell, and haematite.
Their dead were typically buried with the feet cut off, in urns which were placed under house floors or courtyards.