StratigraphicField designates the moment when a corpus ceases to resemble an accumulation of discrete texts and begins to function as a layered epistemic terrain. Its force lies not in quantity, but in sedimentation: the capacity of concepts, images, essays, repositories, urban fragments, diagrams, and citations to acquire internal pressure until they become readable as a field. Within Socioplastics, this is an ontological claim: thought becomes durable when its layers can be entered from multiple points while still revealing coherent structural depth. DiagonalReading then transforms this depth into method. It rejects both linear canon and flat network, approaching the field as a section rather than a catalogue; one reads across theory, urbanism, art, archive, platform, and material practice by following oblique tensions rather than exhaustive sequences. DistributedInscription grounds this architecture in operative visibility: repositories, identifiers, blogs, datasets, profiles, and public interfaces prevent the field from remaining enclosed within a private archive or delayed by institutional recognition. A building, for instance, is legible through plan, regulation, occupation, memory, and image; a city through infrastructure, rent, mobility, climate, care, and symbolic conflict; an artwork through object, display, provenance, discourse, and circulation. As a case synthesis, Socioplastics converts these heterogeneous domains into an inhabitable intellectual landscape: dense enough to resist casual consumption, open enough to permit entry, and distributed enough to endure across platforms. Its conclusion is decisive: a field begins when inscriptions can be crossed, cited, inhabited, and reactivated without losing their pressure. Anto Lloveras / Socioplastics / LAPIEZA-LAB, Madrid / ORCID: 0009-0009-9820-3319