Yeah, so these these different colors on these cross sections represent different different lithologies and we have you know typical in kind of or you know deposit type geology we have what it's called a hanging wall and a foot wall and those are kind of old terms really for just what's above you and what's what's below you this is a stratigraphic deposit so the ore mineralization is this red here as well as the purple and you know we get kind of pervasive mineralization through this later purple as well so this is kind of what we call the mineralized series everything out of there outside of that both above and below it within the hanging wall up here and foot wall here is kind of benign just host rock just a series of you know volcanic volcanic and volcanic plastic rocks that were overlaying on the deposit completely unrelated to the mineralizing event yeah so this is just this is a plan map so we're looking straight down looking at the historic historic drill holes here in kind of this lighter gray more bold holes are the holes that we drilled this past summer these red intervals represent mineralized intervals within all of those drills so and then back to those cross sections these blue lines represent those vertical slices and this one being this one here and this one being this one here and again just kind of showing that through through the drilling that we did this summer you know we just kind of identified a thickening a thickening of mineralization at depth and going off to the east which actually on this long section you know long section here this is kind of a pseudo vertical look but like head on to the deposit so looking at that deposit is just a flat plane and all these points on here represent the Pierce points where those drill holes intercepted that mineralized horizon these this orange here represents kind of the historic extents of kind of the core deposit area this orange outline here represents a few kind of far spaced holes where they had intercepted mineralization kind of down down plunge to the east of the core deposit and these labeled holes here the four hole six holes that we drilled this past summer really trying to figure out the continuity between that core historic deposit and these step out holes that were drilled previously these contours here show the thickness kind of the true thickness of that mineralized section so you can see that some of the the thickest area in the core deposit is roughly 22 meters and I can't remember exactly what hole that was but B-25-04 you know also represents one of the thickest intercepts that have been recorded on the deposit today and by creating these these plots we can kind of figure out where we think that kind of kind of main mineralized section of the deposit is going so our future drilling will be stepping out you know on the holes that we drilled here to really define kind of the trend of that mineralization see how far it goes then we could probably look at some core