Dossier: Generator Layers

Endorsement Marker
Coastline (§§1–2, protocol) + Breakwater Claim Analysis Ledger (§§3–5, site assessments). No normative authority implied.
Harbour Layer
Coastline (framework architecture) & Breakwater (measurement ledger) — dual-layer dossier
Version
0.3 (Second peer-review integration)
Date
2026-03-03 (Europe/Berlin)
Stances
Guardian (EC integrity, colonial-disruption watch), Architect (three-level hierarchy), Scout (re-dating risk, discriminant feasibility), Cartographer (ledger metadata), Verifier (reference hygiene)
Intake Mode
SWEEP · Constraint selection: CANONICAL

The Expedition

This dossier asks two questions. First: how many parent layers — unbroken links of teacher to student, of elder to child — separate us from the deep past? Second: which documented creative traditions demonstrably cross the threshold from fashion into genuine trans-generational persistence?

The framework treats a human generation as a link in a chain. Using genomic data (Wang et al. 2023), the population-weighted mean generation interval is g ≈ 26.9 years, with a sensitivity band of 25–30 years. From a conventional anchor at 52,500 ya, this yields approximately N ≈ 1,750–2,100 parent layers connecting us to the earliest securely dated evidence of symbolic creative behaviour.

The continuity threshold — N > 40 (approximately 1,000 years) — discriminates traditions that persist across enough generations that no single human memory can bridge the gap. Anything surviving beyond forty links is no longer fashion; it is infrastructure.

Primary finding: Aboriginal Australian creative traditions — spanning Madjedbebe (≥65 ka), Murujuga (>50 ka, UNESCO 2025), Nawarla Gabarnmang (48 ka occupation, 28 ka pictographs), and the Kimberley sequence (17.3 ka dated kangaroo) — represent the longest documented continuous creative transmission chains anchored in specific landscapes, with convergent stratigraphic and custodial evidence. These are not fossils. They are living archives with active custodianship.

Status: Finding-in-waiting. Full Ledger entry CL-2026-XXX (with competitors and discriminant conditions) is pending formal drafting.

Structure

This dossier is a dual-layer document. The protocol pages (Background, Architecture) constitute a candidate Harbour Coastline — a falsifiable framework for assessing trans-generational creative transcendence. The measurement pages (Ledger, Falsification, References) constitute a Breakwater compilation applying that protocol to specific sites and traditions.

Background

Plain-language introduction. The question, the chain metaphor, why it matters — no equations required.

Architecture

Three-level transcendence hierarchy (Material → Practice → Semantic), dual evidence channels, scoring protocol, continuity threshold.

Results & Error Budget

Answers to Q1 (parent-layer depth) and Q2 (which traditions cross N > 40). Full error budget from generation-time through dating to epistemic-channel uncertainty.

Ledger

Claim Analysis Ledger. All scored site entries with classifications, discriminant conditions, and feasibility flags.

Falsification

Guardian and Scout flags, stress-test agenda, next falsification steps, and the path to Coastline stabilisation.

References

Partitioned reference list: Constraint Sources, Claim Sources (by site), Custodial Sources, and Deprecated/Demoted audit trail.

Error-Correction Gates

EC-G1 · Anchor-point convention

The 52,500 ya anchor is a Euro-stratigraphic convention, not a claim about the origin of symbolic behaviour. African deep-time evidence (Blombos ≥100 ka, Bizmoune beads ~142 ka) predates this anchor. The Endorsement Marker invites substitution of alternative anchor points without affecting the protocol.

EC-G2 · Category vs. tradition

Species-wide behavioural capacities (mortuary practice, body ornamentation) are category continuities, not single transmission chains. Scale separation prevents over-claiming. A tradition requires identifiable transmission linkage at a specific location or within a specific community.

EC-G3 · Cascade rule is epistemic, not ontological

The rule that semantic continuity cannot be claimed without practice evidence is an epistemic constraint on what this protocol can measure. It does not claim that meaning cannot persist without observable practice — only that we cannot score it without anchoring evidence.

EC-G4 · Source hygiene

Primary peer-reviewed sources (Nature, Science, Science Advances, Antiquity, Journal of Human Evolution) are load-bearing. Popular press, Wikipedia, and aggregator sites are navigation-only. The reference list carries an explicit Deprecated/Demoted audit trail.

The Harbour deals in maps, not territory. No metaphysical claims.

⚐ • ⚑ • ✦