 We're along Little Pine Creek in Lycoming County, which is a tributary to the Susquehanna River. We're standing next to a water quality monitoring station that was set up by the Susquehanna River Basin Commission back in 2010 in an effort to monitor the stream's water quality so that if there were any impacts from shale energy development that data could be collected and we could look at any trends to see if in fact there was an impact from drilling or hydraulic fracturing or production activities. So the five parameters, pH, temperature, conductivity, dissolved oxygen and turbidity are all measured here on a continuous basis. Some of these parameters can really be helpful to determine if there was some sort of impact from upstream drilling activities. In particular, the conductivity of the river's water quality here can be a telltale sign if there was any spill of fluids from a well-drilling pad because the conductivity or the water's ability to transmit an electrical current would increase and therefore the conductivity value that we're recording would also increase. This data is sent via telemetry to a database and then this data is published online so you can look at real-time data on the water quality at any of these 60 stations around the basin. On an annual basis, the Susquehanna River Basin Commission then looks at the trends they see in the data and publishes a report that's online and can be available for anyone to look at if they're interested in the water quality at any of these locations. Looking at the data for this station here, we see that the pH is around seven so it's neutral right where it should be. The conductivity is around 160 millisiemens per centimeter. The dissolved oxygen was eight milligrams per liter so anything above five is where you want to be and the temperature was about 19 degrees Celsius or about 70 degrees Fahrenheit. So all the water quality parameters are right where they ought to be.