Paper 252 of 383
Published June 1, 2026
Individual geological observations rarely provide sufficient context for evaluating large-scale Earth-system organization. Greater confidence often emerges when multiple independent constraints converge within the same geographic or structural domain.
This paper evaluates convergence through anchor density, corridor interaction, transition-zone overlap, deformation persistence, extreme-point distribution, and recurring geological relationships.
Reference systems include the Aegean region, Dead Sea Basin, Arabian structural provinces, Zagros Fold Belt, Himalayan systems, Mount Everest, Mariana Trench, and associated planetary-scale anchors.
The objective is to determine whether geological constraints converge in a measurable and repeatable manner across multiple observational frameworks.
Within ABC Sequencing, convergence is treated as an indicator of analytical interest rather than proof of a particular interpretation.
The framework emphasizes overlap, repetition, and independent support.
This paper evaluates whether multiple independent geological constraints converge within the same planetary-scale regions and structural systems.