This research presents a "System-First" engineering analysis of the metrological standards that governed the Tamil global civilization, spanning the sunken infrastructure of Kumari Kandam to the regional nodes of the Indus Valley. This paper reveals a sophisticated Dual-Track Metrology—a synchronized hybrid of Binary (Base-2/16) and Decimal (Base-10) protocols—designed to eliminate information drift across a planetary-scale grid. The study demonstrates that the Binary/Base-16 system served as the "Hardware Protocol" for marketplace integrity, allowing for visual, self-verifying weights and modular 1: 2: 4 structural ratios. Conversely, the Decimal system acted as the "Administrative Firmware, " managing high-bandwidth scaling and the 60 10 Aal-Thogai script matrix. The core discovery is the identification of the 200-unit and 8000-unit anchors as non-clashing synchronization nodes. The 200-unit anchor is established as the mathematical "handshake" that allowed the binary marketplace to interface with the decimal state ledger without data loss. By quantifying space, weight, and time (Mathirai) through these anchors, the civilization maintained a Standard of Truth that enabled "Zero-Distance" logistics and Type 1 structural stabilization.
Radhakrishnan Jayaraman (Sat,) studied this question.