 As a geophysicist, I had a teacher in high school, grade 12 geology teacher in high school, and earthquake prediction is a huge thing. Okay, Joe, another source says 6,200. Yeah, that might have been one that I heard this morning, but I'll tell you a story about earth scientists, geophysicists, and stuff like this. Earthquake prediction is a huge thing, right? Like, really, it's a huge thing. People want to know how to predict earthquakes because you're going to predict earthquakes. You could save a lot of lives, right? And it means you understand a lot more about the earth. I had a teacher in grade 12, geology teacher, an earth science teacher in grade 11, geology teacher in grade 12. He heard there was a good prediction. We were in Vancouver, right? There was a prediction that there was going to be an earthquake in Japan at a certain period. I can't remember when it was. It was the 70s, maybe, or the 80s. He heard about this prediction, and he flew to Japan. He flew to Japan because he heard there was going to be an earthquake, and he wanted to be in a huge earthquake, right? He never been in a huge earthquake. He was aching for it, right? He stayed there, I believe two weeks. He told the story to us, right? A week or two weeks, and the earthquake didn't happen, right? So he got on the plane, and on his way to Vancouver, the earthquake hit, right? And he kicked himself for getting on the plane and flying back, but there isn't anything he could do. I can't remember when this was, and it was an earthquake, if I go by memory, six-something that it hit, right?