Note: if anyone else is considering having a question locked, please see https://meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/266175/if-answer-locks-shouldnt-be-used-on-comprehensively-answered-questions-then/266390#266390
Old Question
The top voted answer to How to modify existing, unpushed commits? became a community wiki in late February.
Since that time, an additional 4 answers have been added to this already answer-bloated question, 2 of which just regurgitated existing answers (they're both deleted), and the newest of which (just posted today) adds only 1 additional line of code, without much explanation, or warnings as to it's possibe dangerous side-effects.
All in all, the question is bloated with 22 answers that really just add only small, incremental value to existing answers...there's a lot of very slight variation of the basic
git commit --amend -m "your commit message"
There's even a whopping 47(!) answers if you count the deleted ones.
Can this question be locked against new answers?
I've seen some community wiki questions become locked against new answers being added, with a moderator notice that says something like
This is a community effort, please edit existing content, rather than trying to add new answers.
So the specific question I referenced isn't a community wiki, but the top-voted answer is. Does this make the question eligible to be locked against new answers being added?
Examples
Here are some examples of existing questions with such a lock:
Update
After going through the examples of this using the search query above, it appears to me that it is not common to lock on-topic questions this way (the SQL-injection question seems to be the lone exception), though I see a lot of old off-topic questions locked this way.
Are these kind of locks just not really used for on-topic questions, even if they've become bloated by low-value answers?