Well, that's a good question. I guess I'll have to make a distinction between the information that is shown on this map and what, ultimately, the Commission on the Limits of the Continental Shelf will want to see.
The map documents, as I said, the onshore and offshore geology for the whole region, including the Lomonosov Ridge, and it does it using data that were available to us starting in February 2006, because that's when we started the compilation project.
The new data being acquired by Canada and the other polar nations in support of their submissions under the terms of UNCLOS.... For Canada, I believe that started in 2006, which is when we were working our compilation map, so that new data wasn't available to us. The important distinction is that the new data is of a resolution, a level of detail, that far surpasses what we can show at this scale, but that's the level of detail that UNCLOS and the commission will be requiring in order to make their judgments.
So I hesitate to tell you who owns the Lomonosov Ridge, because we're talking about two different data sets.