Thanks Mark. First, I'd like to applaud our team for the efforts this quarter and the positioning of our divisions to take advantage of the key markets in which we're focusing on, while also leveraging our processing and refining technologies, the new exciting markets. At no point in history as our business has been better positioned to serve the markets which we operate in and to capitalize on a broad asset base, our talent and our ability to produce, process, and refine raw materials that are in very high demand. Given our execution, we are extremely excited about the opportunities for all of our entities, but also believe that the enterprise value as a whole is currently at a substantial discount relative to the sum of the parts or comparable to peer valuation. I'd like to dive into it briefly on each division here. American Carbon start, currently, carbon markets are still in a very strong position. There's been recently changes within the market and shifts within geographic demands of China and Australia opening back up of relations and which shifts our markets back to India, Turkey, Croatia, and the markets which we've historically serviced as well as the domestic marketplace. We believe that market will remain strong. There's very little capital being invested into the metallurgical space. Supply growth has been decreasing, while at the same point, we've seen a strong demand, including additional steel mills domestically being opened up. We do remain steadfast and focused on monetizing our carbon assets, whether through operating them ourselves, joint vendors, leases, or asset sales. With the primary focus on the operational side being our McCoy Elkhorn complex and our Wyoming County complex. Both McCoy and Wyoming County represent very high-quality metallurgical carbon products that can be operated in a very low cost structure. McCoy mines represent a high-vol carbon product, which we have recently shifted around our production to even drive our cost structure lower, while taking advantage of the current markets. We have also recently announced the restart of our two on-site processing plants at the McCoy Elkhorn facility. This complex can process over 1,300 tonnes an hour with one of the longest standing water impoundments within the state of Kentucky and two of the highest quality processing plants in the region, providing us an opportunity to further cut our cost per ton, while enabling us to supplement our revenue with third-party processing and loading services. We continue to have ample inventory which will be sold into the market in the near-term. That inventory represents effectively cash and ultimately, at the end of the last quarter, we had a substantial amount of inventory, which we are selling into the market, which will generate substantial cash to enable us to continue to grow our business and execute upon our [Indiscernible]. We've also mentioned within our Perry County complex, our desire to monetize that complex, either through the asset sales and/or selling the complex. We believe that represents over $40 million in value based on the asset and inventories we have on site of equipment, and we are currently in the process of monetizing that equipment, generating cash to grow the business through our either ReElement division and/or our American Carbon division. Also recently, our Deane complex has entered production. We have been receiving cash flows from the Deane complex and we believe that the current market for that call remains strong. And the opportunity that, that lessor has to continue to drive value for themselves as well as our shareholders remain strong. Our current focus over the balance of the year for American Carbon is to run four sections out of Carnegie 1 and 2 mine, which should get us to roughly 40,000 to 44,000 tons a month of production as we continue to scale that complex up, which we will do over time. Our platform is unique given the significant mining infrastructure we own. The quality of carbon that we produce and have access to the restructuring efforts and investments that we've made to streamline the operations, along with the organic growth we have to provide incremental quality of carbon products. For American Carbon, we remain focused on ramping production at Complex. And positioning Wyoming County as our next pillar of growth given the premium mid-wall carbon complex producers. Lately, our team is putting a substantial amount of effort into the Wyoming County complex. We're progressing on it from an operational perspective and getting the processing plant in good order, electricity in place to be able to ramp up that production quickly and efficiently. As Kirk mentioned earlier, we also believe we are in a good position to close on our $45 million taxes that bond in the state of West Virginia in short order. The credit markets have seen stabilization focusing on following a very aggressive interest rate policy from the Federal Reserve. That complex is in a unique spot. It will be the first fully-integrated met carbon complex, which also acts as a concentrator of rare earth elements and critical elements, meaning lithium and cobalt that are present within coat seats [ph]. More importantly, it's set up in a method, and we believe the only method within the coal industry where you can extract these elements profitably, produce a concentrate that can later be purified using our ReElement Technologies. We're excited to get that complex in place and showcase it to the world with ultimately the goal of being able to either license that out to other coal mines in terms of the technology of adding it on to the processing plants and/or monetizing it in other avenues. With the closing of this non-dilutive capital source, we're excited to showcase this complex within the industry and be able to scale it up aggressively from a revenue position as well as from a value perspective. Within the ReElement Technologies to expand upon what Mark has already made -- the statements Mark has already made, we have never been involved in ending that has a higher [Indiscernible]. The opportunities that are present within the refining space for lithium, for cobalt, for rare earth elements, within not only the domestic market, but also the international market has never been needed more. We rely on a solvent extraction hydrometallurgical process, which is an old legacy process, which we believe can only truly be utilized within China. We look to disrupt the space by providing not only a lower cost, but at a more environmentally-sensitive method to refining critical and rare earth elements, but also being able to do it in a highly scalable manner and showcasing that to the world here very shortly. The number of opportunities we are seeing to provide our next-generation advanced refining capacity as a value-added service continued to accelerate. We are seeing more and more opportunities across different portions of the supply chain, which showcases the performance, the cost structure and the flexibility of our refining platform and also our ability to move quickly in terms of adding additional production capacity. As we evaluate these opportunities, we are continually entering into pilot programs for different feedstocks. Currently, our partnership and pilot programs are focused on end-of-life recycled magnets, end-of-life recycling of various battery types, and chemistries and battery manufacturing waste and scrap, as well as naturally-occurring lithium spodumene ores for the lithium refining market. As we continue to showcase our refining performance, including our ability to supply high throughput capacity to producing ultra-pure critical mineral products, we are confident in incremental collaborative partnerships we will enter into. We're also excited to performance of our technology, most recently announcing a 99.98% pure lithium carbonate, which can be used directly in the battery manufacturing process. The purity of which we produce that and the consistency of size and quality is a key to how our product will be continually adopted within the battery manufacturing marketplace. We talk about recycling, and you hear about battery recycling within the industry today. Recycling means many things to different parties. The recycling market continues to be an exciting market where ReElement refining can add a significant driver of value through that industry. Recycling ultimately means breaking products down and using them into new forms and products. What's key about our ReElement Technology is we can reuse those forms back into batteries, back into magnets, where most of the battery recyclers today within the domestic market are selling that recycled material to China to be either smelted or recycled over in China. We're one of the few players within the domestic market that can recycle that back to battery-grade or magnet-grade today, which ultimately is key in addressing the sustainability needs of the industry in itself, which is a big opportunity as the infrastructure and manufacturing of electric goods has stood up in our country and continues to grow. We are seeing numerous opportunities in the recycling phase beyond what we have announced with our Magna partners. We are seeing those opportunities for both magnets and battery materials. We have also most recently commenced several pilot programs to recycle these critical minerals from feedstock sources such as power tools, EV motors from OEMs, wind turbines from large wind manufacturing companies or operators, black mass producers, battery manufacturers, and industrial battery sources, large and small from tool manufacturers to others. We are also in the discussions with several auto OEMs as they continue to plan, develop, and stand up the infrastructure needed to support their well-held line plans to transition to more of a broader electric fleet, including their battery manufacturing space. In terms of recycling, I think it's worth reiterating how we are strategically positioning to be a value-added partner in addressing our sustainability needs. We have what we believe to be the only CapEx flexible refining technology in the world, that we can scale as feedstock is available, eliminating CapEx risk, which ultimately eliminates risk for our shareholders. We don't have to go out and spend $0.5 billion to build a refining complex using installment extraction that will take 10 years to ramp up to that production capacity. We can expand our production capacity as the feedstock availability grows instead of waiting for manufacturing scrap or end-of-life battery scrap to grow, which ultimately means we can make money in the process today. Several recycling programs do not have the innovative and economically-competitive refining capacity other than ours. And as we mentioned earlier, it's the biggest bottleneck in the global supply chain, meaning the refining capacity. And we believe conventional refined methods such as solvent extraction or hydrometallurgical as used in China will be a challenge to deploy or will not be cost-effective being operated in the United States. Our ability to refine a variety of feedstocks, natural recycling, and handle rapidly evolving battery chemistries with the ability to quickly adapt as a differentiator and competitive advantage. I'd like to touch briefly on international opportunities, including Africa. With regards to naturally occurring lithium refining, we continue to see some very attractive opportunities to produce quantities of lithium products such as high-purity lithium carbonate or hydroxide to the battery market. As we have recently mentioned, we have evaluated several opportunities for our technology to be used in refining lithium from ore-based materials, produced from different regions, including Africa. And we have been very selective in our evaluation process to partner with operations that meet the standards of the United States. Upon review of our strategic committee, we believe American Resources' best interest is to leverage our advanced processing meaning heavy media separation, which we've operated in the carbon industry for over 20 -- meaning current linear resources as well as our team's experience, and our refining technology and other natural resources such as lithium and other critical minerals, thereby broadening our natural resource base of American Resources. It is worth reiterating and emphasizing the partnerships, procurement, and initial processing of a broader, more diversified natural resource base will take place at the American Resources level, which will feed into the ReElement division as feedstock. Again, to reiterate, ReElement is an advanced refining platform and our intention is to focus and keep clean and streamline as a value-added refiner of critical minerals and advanced materials, especially as we continue to position for its planned spin-off. As we are currently pursuing a long-term refining partnership to refine lithium produced in the Western Africa region as well as in South Africa, we are also working with a long-term independent Director to leverage his network and his experience within this region. And to bring our refining capabilities to that region, either through sourcing the material or being located and co-located. Our ability to this technology with its unique attributes enables us to increase the value of these regions natural resources into high-purity forms instead of exploiting and exporting that value. Opportunities like this further exemplify the unique attributes of our ReElement refining platform in terms of flexibility of the feedstock and chemistries, ability to be efficiently deployed due to its modular design and environmental sensitivity and to produce pure products needed for our technology, energy, and defense sectors with high and scalable capacity. Now, this will be done either through a partnership and/or internally using our technologies and our capabilities as a company. I'd like to shout out recognize ReElement team for the ground-breaking success, and we've achieved with a quick timeframe that they've achieved it. We do not believe the time is of the essence. We believe we put together the best team and continue to drive this revolutionary refining technology and that we will continue to add top talent to deploy it around the world. Additionally, and from a technical perspective, we believe that we have the world's best chromatography experts and team behind our ReElement division, whether if it's our university partners at Purdue, our engineering team that has a long-standing success developing and commercializing the foundation of this technology [Indiscernible], as well as the team members that we continually add and most recently adding a number of team members through the ReElement division. We have and continued to add top talent to further execute upon this vision as well as position ReElement as a stand-alone company. Some of these recent additions that I've just mentioned, Bob Galyen, as our Board of Directors, been on spin off. Bob is one of the top battery industry experts and a technical adviser in a recent addition to our Board of Directors at ReElement post-spin-off and a battery industry expert. Steven Frankowski, our Controller of ReElement. Steven comes to us with several years of large accounting firm experience and two years of financial reporting at the AES Corporation working in the Clean Energy segment. Daniel Archer, a process engineering lead and in charge of rare earth element materials. Israel Gomez, Process Engineer Lead in terms critical element materials. We continue to position ReElement as a global refining leader and the entity that will deliver significant value to our shareholders. Our goal is to build ReElement to a multibillion-dollar business and we believe we have the team and the line of sight to do that. Before we get into question-and-answer, I'd like to briefly comment on American Metals. American Metals position that we've been utilizing for generating cash flows by scrapping out ferrous metals. As we mentioned earlier, ReElement is not just a recycling platform, but an advanced refining platform. We are positioned in the American Metals division, which is an aggregator and processor metals to ultimately be recycled within the electrified economy. Given ReElement's refining capacity, we are asked if we can take entire batteries, battery packs, modulars, motors, and tools. However, we also want ReElement to remain as a pure refinery materials. As such, we believe American Metals is a great platform to leverage the ReElement refining capacity by processing and the constituent high-value battery materials in the black mass product to feed ReElement's battery materials refining capacity as well as the end-of-life motors and tools that we have developed a process in an automated way to recycle these, extract out the rare earth elements and be able to feed those rare earth elements back into the supply chain for domestic growth. In closing, we remain very confident in our position of all of our assets and the long-term value that we provide our shareholders. We remain hyper-focused on unlocking value and we already communicated our initial strategic steps to do so. We have ample liquidity and do not foresee the need of issuing equity to raise cash, especially with some of the sources of non-dilutive capital we have available. Just to reiterate, as the largest shareholder of American Resources, our management team is committed on maximizing the value for all of our shareholders. We believe our continued execution in the splitting of the ReElement division are the key and steps in doing so. One thing I'm proud about of our company is the individuals that we're bringing in, the team that we've built are focused on equity value. We're not hired guns. Nobody in this business is joining our company for high salaries. They're focused on driving equity value, being a part of something that's innovative, and ultimately, being proud of the business that we built. I'm excited about the team we've been able to build and the team that we're currently recruiting to add on to our company, and ultimately, excited that everybody is focused on aligning their interest with our shareholders of making sure driving the equity value of the company versus being hired guns. We believe that's a key differentiator of our business and why our business has been able to succeed through both good markets and bad markets. I thank all of you for joining the call today, and now I would like to turn it over to the moderator for some Q&A.