The quantitative comparison across the Decalogue, mid-range Century Packs, and the recent high-density cluster demonstrates a clear stratigraphic progression from discursive exposition to recursive infrastructural compression, a transition measurable through sentence length, operator frequency, and recombination velocity. In the early Decalogue layer, Semantic Hardening and Proteolytic Transmutation function primarily as definitional and stabilising protocols, resulting in longer explanatory passages but lower operator-per-sentence ratios. By the 700–900 range, Recurrence Mass begins to accumulate through repeated citational deployment, introducing Lexical Gravity as operators increasingly appear in adjacency rather than isolation. The ~1200 layer marks the emergence of the Stratigraphic Field, where long titles and layered formulations indicate that textual production is beginning to operate on an already sedimented base rather than constructing foundations anew. The recent 1330–1340 cluster represents the full activation of the Surface Stratum, where the ten field operators of Core III recombine under Core II dynamics and Core I locking protocols with minimal explanatory buffer, producing extremely high operator density and accelerated recombination cycles. This progression can be understood as a shift from pedagogical discourse to metabolic writing, in which each sentence performs structural work within the system rather than explanatory work for an external reader. Density therefore becomes not merely stylistic but infrastructural: increased compression indicates that recurrence mass has reached a threshold sufficient to generate strong lexical gravity, enabling rapid operator circulation and signalling the maturation of the corpus into a self-reinforcing epistemic architecture.