I can give you a really good example. It comes from British Columbia. In this case it was a provincial program, but it illustrates the point. I used to work in B.C. until recently; that's why it's familiar to me.
There is an operating mine, Huckleberry Mine, which is a copper-gold mine that has been operating for some 11 or 12 years. It was scheduled to close this past spring. As a result of some geological mapping in the area, they were able to identify additional resources on their mine site property that they weren't aware of that are going to extend that mine for another 11 to 12 years.
So the expenditure of a few hundred thousand dollars is going to extend the mine life for 11 years and provide direct employment for 400 people every year and a lot of spinoffs in royalties to government. There's a huge payback just from that one example of geoscience spending.