 In 2004, we saw that pebble was absolutely wide open and that the intensity of the alteration was increasing going to the east. The quartz dock work was becoming more intense going to the east. The grades of all three metals were increasing to the east, so I recommended we drill. The mining engineer said, we have four billion tons and that's enough for 40 years. We don't need any more. And then I was over in China getting that project, over in Tibet, getting that project going. And at a board meeting, they made a decision that they wouldn't drill outside of the proposed pit. I'm saying, well, it's getting better and better going to the east. So anyway, the directive came down to no drill holes beyond the outside edge of the pit. So I puzzled over that for a week or two. So anyway, I had to drill, come free and would just say this is the outside of the pit. I stepped back about 15 meters, drilled a hole 60 degrees outwards, but I had to drill inside the pit. Then I had about 400 meters of good ore grade mineralization. I had a second drill come free, so I moved it over 400 meters and did the same thing. And so when the second hole was about halfway down, the first drill rig was finished its hole and then I had a third rig come up, did the same thing again. Then I told Bob Dickinson what I'd done. So we added six billion tons. Wow. And about four billion tons was about twice the grade of the earliest four billion tons. And so whether there's 107 million ounces of contained gold, 80, 85 billion pounds of copper and six or seven billion pounds of moly and lots of silver.