The Mud Flood Survey — Archive Plate 47B, City of New Eldwick
This plate was not meant to be seen. Commissioned by the Bureau of Municipal Survey, City of New Eldwick, Survey Order No. 1887-42, Archive Plate 47·B documents what institutional memory has worked tirelessly to obscure: that the present ground level is not the original ground level. The building did not sink. The earth came up around it. Surveyed by B. H. Linden, C.E., Municipal Engineer, assisted by J. P. Morrison, Survey Draftsman, this record was filed under MS/47B/1887 and marked for official use only — never intended for public circulation.
The plate presents Tartarian Structure No. 17, Eastwick Row, in two views. On the left, a geological cutaway reveals three distinct strata above the original grade: Post-reset compaction at an estimated depth of 2.1 metres, Transitional fill, and the original pre-event surface at approximately 7 metres below present pavement. On the right, the east elevation shows the same building as it stands today — grand arched windows beginning below street level, lower openings that were never designed as basement windows, a foundation that is not a foundation. The layers don't lie. The survey does not speculate. It only measures.
Printed on museum-quality matte poster paper sourced from Japan. Sharp, clean print with vibrant color and a matte finish that eliminates glare. Wipe clean with a cloth. Ships rolled in a protective tube.
Part of the Etherfolk Hidden Histories Collection.
This plate is for official record only.
Not for public circulation.