 So, I think everybody hears me. Thank you for coming. I'm watching our presentation. Now I am pushing my digital watch. Okay. Now, unfortunately, my life-shaking writing is just the leader of the excavation is not here. So, now as Sasanga said, we have to find another doctor writing which is me. Okay, so our excavation is quite interesting for us at least because it is the first excavation, which is not a solid excavation inside Istanbul Big Boundaries. And we are talking about a place, a place 20 km west of Bosphorus. People are saying that there is nobody in Istanbul left, but anyway, with a couple of seasons we provided that it's not the case. So this is Kucukçek Meca Lake. One of these two, the typical lakes there, which is near North of Marmara Sea. And in two areas, we call it areas 8 and area 24, I think you are able to follow the cursor. Yeah, this is area 8 and area 24. We carried out a couple of seasons of excavations. Okay, in this excavation we found more than 50,000 ceramic pieces, 20,000 glasses and many thousands of iron and metal parts, but a couple of these findings are quite surprising. Now in the left hand corner, upper corner, this is tin. Inside a typical mid-second millennium BC Anatolian ceramic. And this is the same ceramic a little bit together. And there are two statutes, typical early heated types. And one is them, this goddess, we call it goddess, is almost 100% iron. And the other one is 70% iron and 30% tin. And also we have a single piece of this white slip two separate ceramics. Some Myosinian, two pieces of Myosinian, we cannot tell exactly the date, but from the context we can say everything's within this 16 to 14th century BC. And a small handle from the west of Bulgaria. And the last but not the least, this lead figurine, probably a goddess mounted on it there. So let me talk about a little bit our excavation. So for a couple of years, we just went with a very good, I would say, financing, which was stopped now, unfortunately. But anyway, what we did, first we started with the absolute building, which was destroyed at 6th century AD. And when it was destroyed, it was one of the quite big churches. This is the absolute building we started. And this is the final form after a couple of years. So the ground level was about 12 and a half meters above the sea level. And the lowest level we just came was 9.6 meters above the sea level. The surprise was that in this upside, so we encountered first this goddess, this iron goddess, it was quite corrupted. But we made analysis and XRF fluorescence techniques and we found that this is the most we can renovate it because it could collapse anytime. And what we are showing here with red line, this is in this trench, there was about 30 centimeters of sea sediment with lots of mollusk sea creatures and sea sand. And below that, there was coming lots of architecture and other findings. When we go deeper than the sea sediment, something came out like that. And a couple of days later it was clear that it was a stone, not building, but some kind of storage area with 70 to 100 centimeters inside the diameter. And here, which as you see here, there was this, it is thin. But as we know that in very wet conditions, powder thin can become very kind of cream stuff. And it was this. And you see the same storage area from the different point of view. And in this drawing, number one shows where we encountered the goddess and this two where we found the tin. And this is XRF and it says 99.5 tin and the rest are very small percentage of iron. Okay, now after a couple of weeks of excavation, what we discovered about the absolute building, there was lots of other findings. And as you see this goddess we already introduced you here, we have this tin. But also one single piece of this separate shards come right here. There are other typical Anatolian type of myths, a second millennium BC Anatolian type of ceramics here and just a couple of meters to the west, southwest of this upside, within the same building. We have other type of Anatolian red stuff and this Mycenaean pieces and this Bulgarian handle. When we go further 40 meters from the upside, when we go there to another trench, so we encountered another small Hittite-top statue. This is a god, the 70 percent iron and the rest is 30 percent tin as I said. And also we had another excavation area, as I told you, this is number eight. And in this number eight area, we're excavating first and regularly a huge early Byzantine or late Roman palace complex, probably belonging to Constantinus in this sense. But of course in Turkey, you know the Turkey, some real amateur excavators work much harder than the professional ones. And here, sorry, in a couple of places there was some very deep trenches made by these robbers. And from these trenches, we were able to a little bit look at the very past because the regular excavation was going to the Roman times or we were just about to touch anything at times. But from these small excavated places, we were able to collect this second millennium ceramics and other stuff. Well, in this picture also there was another thing. This is a lead figurine again from the Hittite times. As I told you, so we tried to make some charcoal analysis, C414 analysis. And the surprise was that they gave 6,000 B.C., 6 million B.C. And there are some calculated to early Bronze Age shirts also coming in the same area. Yes, Anatolian type pitcher, what we found. Also again the same, I'm showing the same Cyprus stuff and other red Anatolian type of ceramics. What we counted was there was 14 distinct vessels. And as you may see from here, they were the copies of this metallic vessel, which was quite common in the early parts of second millennium BC. It's a metallic, very expensive and there are copies in the ceramics. Also in this trench, there was this gut, small figurine of gut. But in the same trench, there was another thing which was not so abnormal in a place which has a big harbor. This is some bitumens from Mesopotamia, probably most probably from Mesopotamia. But it shows that what we are digging was an international harbor. Just to remind you that we have two different excavation areas, this is 8. And in the 8, so we found this goddess mounted on a deer. And the analysis shows that 70% is lead and other things. The size point of view, this is something that is very coming in Hittite time, as you see lots of goddesses just mounted on deer. And they are in Hittites known as De Lamma, protective guard of goddesses. There were other things we found, just small pieces and a small weight. This type of animal type of weight was common in the Egyptian also. Well, the conclusion is as I said, but the question, how this material could have come here? From the Uluberund shipwreck, we know that there was a huge trade connections and commerce in all eastern Mediterranean. And people were thinking that the ships were going up and down from Bostors, which was very tricky. And because we have to think that Uluberund ship was, this is the replica of Uluberund ship and this is the plan of it. You know, there is no rovers. These are not proper row, they are just steering. With such a ship, if you put 20 tons of a typical late Bronze Age load, you cannot go to north from Bostors. You cannot go neither from the Dardanelles, which is slightly easier than Bostors. People tried this. There's an organization which made the replica. They cannot sail up with a good wind up the Dardanelles. They never tried to Bostors. But what can be done was this type of ships with hundreds or 170 rovers, just in a typical terrarium. Of course, with such a ship, you can go up. But these ships cannot carry any sizable trade goods. So this is also my PhD thesis. The commercial people doesn't care about sending ships to this place or that place. They care to send their goods safely, cheaply, and quickly from A to B. So this is the purpose by myself, that the ships were coming from agency, going the narrow, this is of Gediwold Peninsula. And another ship was carrying to Batonea, our excavation site, and small landfruits going to the only natural harbor in Black's area, and it was just distributed. So this is a detailed version of the same thing. Thank you very much. So I think I will be able to fast and cut short my presentation.