Yes, thank you.
The example I mentioned in my remarks--and we will be submitting our formal submission to all of you and to the minister next week--is the case of Nunavut. About 73% of the territory is unmapped in terms of geological mapping, yet there's a lot of global interest in that part of the world, uranium and diamonds, etc., and this is really a basic infrastructure that a government has to provide.
Companies are used to looking for needles in haystacks, but they need to have a sense of where the haystacks are, and that's what geological mapping provides. That's why it's a basic investment of countries around the world that want to attract this.
The Geological Survey predates Confederation, in fact, and the problem is the investment, the money for that organization and for geological mapping has decreased by quite a bit over the last fifteen years. We would like it increased so that a more active geological mapping program and quality mapping can exist.