The short answer is no. We are not able to provide facts. However, as Dr. Boerner indicated earlier, we have conducted some very preliminary characterizations before mapping the aquifers.
You asked us whether we were familiar with the Alberta aquifer. I'm going to take the time to give you an explanation, because this is extremely important. There is no aquifer either in Alberta or Canada. Aquifers are formations on different scales. It goes from an extremely localized scale—a few wells, to a more local scale, let's say a municipality that is approximately 100 km squared, to the scale of thousands of square kilometres, which the Geological Survey of Canada calls the regional scale.
Slide 7 presents a series of aquifers. It's quite schematic, and shouldn't be looked at as delimiting the aquifers. This system is presented on a regional scale, but it doesn't include all the aquifers in Alberta, far from it. This needs to be quite clear.
To answer your question, we don't know the details and we cannot give you a detailed report, but we do know the geology, as Mr. Boerner said. We know the geological system, meaning the reservoirs that, by the way, do not just include aquifers. There are three things: aquifers, aquitards and aquicludes. I apologize for using technical terms, but I have to. There is a distinction between the three. In the case of the Athabasca oil sands, the BV or buried paleovalleys are fairly shallow and relatively quaternary channels, but—