CONCEPT
The Irreversibility Threshold
The ecological finding that sustained engineering past a threshold duration produces <em>legacy effects</em> that persist in the landscape even after the engineer departs — and that below the threshold, the investment does not partially accumulate but is lost entirely.
Butler and Malanson, studying beaver dam geomorphic legacies in the Rocky Mountains, documented that when a dam is maintained for a sufficient period — typically several decades — sediment accumulation behind it reaches a point where the landscape has been permanently altered. The valley floor rises. Soil profiles change. Hydrological characteristics are modified at a level that persists even if the dam is removed. The engineering produces a legacy that exceeds the engineer's tenure. But when a dam is abandoned before this threshold is reached, the landscape reverts. The investment does not partially accumulate. It is lost entirely.
In The You On AI Field Guide
The threshold dynamic is not linear. Investment does not accumulate incrementally until the engineer decides to stop. There is a specific duration below which the ecological legacy never forms, and above which the legacy persists independently of continued engineering. The threshold is determined by the engineering modification's magnitude, the rate of environmental