and we have danny smith here, digging away with dan smith. and he is -- you can tell them what you're doing there, danny. >> okay. if my voice can hold up. so what we're doing is difficult. we're digging into a well. and this well happens to be in the southwest corner of the church. now, it looks like that's just a coincidence, though. but we wanted to make sure that it didn't relate to the church. so wanted to make sure it didn't relate to the church. and we dig into it to see we can find diagnostic artifacts. it's here until 1817 and it shifts to another location over there. what we've been finding are artifacts later than that date, it looks like it's coincidence. it's a later well. it looks like it will date to the mid-17 century. still a 350-year-old well. we're actually widening the hole. the well is actually about -- it was a wooden barrel lined or cask-lined well, about 2 1/2, 3 feet in diameter, we're widening it in diameter to put a steel casing in here. we have 68 more feet to go. even though this doesn't relate to james fort in all