It's truly a world body of knowledge. The various participating nations provided their national database--and data sets, I should say. Where Canadians excel, I think, I guess because of the size of the country, is in interpreting things at a global scale. I think one of the reasons we were given the lead on the project was the opportunity to do exactly that.
Obviously the Russians have a big country as well, and they're good at it as well, although science in North America and science in Russia aren't identical. There are slightly different ways of thinking about geology in Russia compared to North America. Canada, I think, has the expertise to think at the broad scale. In that sense, the Europeans appreciate what we do.
You'd think the Americans would do the same, and they do—not to denigrate their work—but again, we have a much larger land mass to worry about, integrate, and think about in terms of geological evolution. I think we've just become really good at it.