The movement from five to ten percent archival fixation marks the moment when an experimental research ecology crosses into infrastructural territory. Early stages of theoretical construction depend upon fluidity: hundreds of essays accumulate, concepts circulate freely, and vocabulary evolves through iterative testing. Such conditions are essential for the birth of a field, yet they cannot sustain long-term intelligibility. At a certain scale the corpus begins to behave less like a sequence of writings and more like a geological deposit whose layers demand structural consolidation. Increasing the proportion of DOI-anchored texts performs precisely this task. The archive ceases to resemble a provisional notebook and begins to operate as a stabilized knowledge surface where selected nodes function as immovable reference points. The transition from five percent fixation to ten percent therefore does not represent bureaucratic inflation but epistemic maturation. It is the moment when theoretical production acquires the capacity to organize itself. Infrastructural thought replaces exploratory proliferation.