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Draft #2177 submit failed Created Apr 28, 2026, 23:20:20

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The thread-carrier idea is a plausible-sounding hypothesis, not a known fact. Archaeologists have not confirmed any use for Roman dodecahedra, and textile-use theories remain speculative rather than accepted conclusions. https://www.npr.org/2024/01/24/1226575715/archaeologists-roman-empire-dodecahedron-england https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0312007

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I may have figured this out. The shape is perfect for carrying thread before spindles. One dodecahedron could carry a ton of thread in a very compact form and one bag could hold many colors, easily spooled out then tied off when done. The holes kept it from being too heavy. https://t.co/3ywfoVMPDy https://t.co/8ie4CDpEDN

Apr 28, 2026, 17:40:24 Open on X →

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{
  "post_text": "[Target Post]\nI may have figured this out. The shape is perfect for carrying thread before spindles.  One dodecahedron could carry a ton of thread in a very compact form and one bag could hold many colors, easily spooled out then tied off when done. The holes kept it from being too heavy. https://t.co/3ywfoVMPDy https://t.co/8ie4CDpEDN\n(This post has 2 attached image(s))\n\n[Quoted Post]\nThese are Roman Dodecahedrons. Hundreds have been found across Europe dating back to the 2nd century and they a"
}

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{
  "has_factual_claims": true
}

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X API request failed (403): {'detail': 'Failed to create a note. You’ve reached your daily limit for writing notes.', 'type': 'about:blank', 'title': 'Forbidden', 'status': 403}