 I found a plate. I found some Chinaware. That's really neat. There's like this plate. Yeah, there's some more plate. That's awesome. This one has a blue on it. Yeah, and that's how they know what time period it came from. So if it has more blue, they're able to tell that it's from a certain time period or if it has more white stuff. So you are at Museum Expedition 39 and we are at Old Kehaba Archaeological Park. This year our archaeological project is to work on a dig at the First State Capitol building. This is the First State Capitol of Alabama. So after the Capitol moved to Tuscaloosa in 1926, this building was still here. And so the townspeople still used it as a church or whatever else. Until it burned. So then you have what we're seeing evidence of folks they're calling robbers trenches. It's where they were digging in the brick that hadn't been burned because they needed it for their buildings. They get their hands dirty, so to speak, by actually doing a field science. In this case, we're doing archaeology. We've done paleontology. And so it gets to take the kids out of the classroom and actually do hands-on field science with scientists in the field. And that's something that you just do not see for a lot of the kids that come on Expedition or the general public. It's their first taste of being out in the field in Alabama and getting to see parts of their state that they never saw before they never interacted with. So it really opens up their eyes not just to different people from different parts of the state but to different parts of the state all entirely. And that's really cool to see people really gain a deeper level of appreciation for their state.