impact and there's a small chance of larger damage. But overall, just go have fun on the woods boys. It's not my money you're throwing away. Or is it like this is one step closer to someone maybe trying to tweak into a marginal argument that this could be a legitimate mind even if you would say it's not. I mean, is that that danger exists simply because they're doing this or is this not a harmless activity but well it's just it is something it is. I guess I'm wondering how big of that slippery slope is even the exploratory drilling and acquiring that knowledge towards that mind. Is it like the slopes a long way out there? It's safe before it gets slippery or are we any drilling gets us one step closer to that slippery slope? Yeah, that's that's our hard one to answer. I mean, you know, geologists and especially economic geologists love to get this information they love to learn. And just from the science alone, you know, there is geologists are learning that much more about, you know, the nature of, you know, how the Wisconsin landmass was formed. It's fascinating. You know, I get a kick out of reading it and learning more about it. Is it a slippery slope? Potentially because that knowledge can be used, you know, as an application towards other drilling depending on the geology. So, you know, it's hard to know it's a long-term game. You know, this won't be the last mining company I'm sure to, you know, attempt to find more deposits here. We've been lucky from one standpoint that it's been difficult for the mining companies to locate these deposits just because the glacial overburden is deep enough in most places that it's it doesn't make at least initial exploration activity very easy. And that's usually aeromagnetic surveys where they're flying planes over, you know, vast swaths of acreage looking for, looking for magnetic responses that they can record and then, you know, track them down on land to try to figure out whether or not there might be something there that's worth actually sinking a borehole into. So that has impeded development of potential mining here. But that still doesn't mean that there are more deposits out there. It's entirely possible that this is it. This is all that ever will be found. So,