 we were talking about the potential partnership specifically around digitization of collections, but there's been a concern about the safety of these records because where the park is situated, wildfires, especially in the past few years, have been an annual threat. And so it was very much on Ward Eldridge's mind, the long-term safekeeping of these records. And he pointed out that UC Merced is located, is probably in one of the few areas in California that is outside of a high-risk fire zone, and also outside of the risk of earthquake threat. And it was just no question that we would do whatever we could to bring them here. Really, it was the ash and everything, yeah, was falling down, hundreds of boxes of collections, and also those cabinets of plant specimens and baskets or artifacts as well. And because the residents in the area were also being called to evacuate, there was just this shortage that he couldn't find a van or a truck. And so in the course of a day, we managed to make arrangements. Anyone interested in the history of this very special place, the history of the Sequoia trees, and this is the one place where these trees live, understanding what is it about, what is unique about the environment. The rangers and the interpreters who want to then provide and present that history to the general public, also to scholars who want to really investigate, what does it mean to manage public lands? What's effective in terms of management practices? Well, we're going to work with the park service to make sure that they are going to stay safe.