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AI-generated conjecture · below the evidence/publication boundary

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The first retention schedule

Status: Already answered

Status is derived only from the shepherd-authored triage/prediction data above -- community submissions and claims are a separate overlay and can never change it (see the participation panel below).

This is a proposed connection between two domains, generated by a language model. It is not an article and not evidence: it sits below the evidence/publication boundary. A quantitative prediction and a named kill-dataset are attached (when registered) so the claim stays falsifiable rather than merely evocative.

Claim (verbatim)

Modern records management assigns every document class a retention period: destroy receipts after a few years, keep deeds forever. Old Babylonian families kept household archives whose contents at burial can be aged genre by genre against the archive's last dated tablet. The conjecture: those households ran implicit retention schedules — receipts discarded within a few years, loan documents held until repayment (so the survivors are disproportionately the unpaid), title deeds curated across generations and transferred with the property — making a house archive a maintained legal instrument rather than a passive accumulation. If it holds, the odd sight of century-old deeds beside week-old receipts becomes lawful, and the age-by-genre profile separates curated archives from catastrophically frozen ones with no need of stratigraphy.

Prediction clause (verbatim)

In Old Babylonian private archives with at least 30 datable tablets, median document age at archive termination will be ordered: real-estate deeds above 30 years, loans between roughly 5 and 15 years, receipts and administrative notes below 5 years. Primary clause, which decides the verdict: a Kruskal-Wallis test across the three genre classes is significant at p<0.05 in at least 80 percent of qualifying archives. Secondary clause: deed age distributions show a multigenerational tail (maximum above 60 years) in a majority of archives.

Kill-dataset (verbatim)

Archibab (Old Babylonian private archives with document dates, genres, and archive attributions).

In the atlas

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Provenance

Run: Fresh agent generation · model: claude-fable-5

Composed blind by claude-fable-5 from internal knowledge only, with zero tool calls, and emitted directly as a single JSON text message.

Novelty / leakage triage

already answered in the literature

Searched Babylonian private-archive retention practices. That household archives were curated legal instruments with genre-dependent retention — deeds kept across generations and transferred with property, ephemera discarded — is documented in the archival-practice literature (Baker 2003 on which document types private archives retained/discarded; the Brosius volume on ancient record-keeping); the OB age-profile statistics are packaging.

Predictions

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