Thanks Carlos, for the questions. So to answer some of the questions I sort of have to assume that you – what you're guessing on in terms of the area is correct. And based on your – the characteristics that you mentioned, you would not be correct. So I'll answer it the way we can answer it. And I'm not going to tell you, unfortunately, for you. I'm not going to tell you exactly for competitive reasons, exactly where this is, we're just not going to disclose that. But what I will say is that this is a new area, as we talked about. It is in what I would call now our development area, part of it may have been already sort of noted in our couple of hundred thousand acres of development area and part of it is not. So if you wanted to count acres, I suppose, you could say that there's more development acres to be added. And not just, by the way, not just from this area, but probably from other areas as well because the 200,000-acre number is fairly stale. In terms of what the wells did and how they looked. They've been producing for a bit of time. As I said, we have a meaningful amount of measurement period, if you will, what I could tell you, we directed some of this activity because it was in our view a gassier area and we wanted to take advantage of that. And fortunately, our gas realizations were double what they were a year ago, so that worked out just fine. But importantly, and I think maybe critically, the financial returns and payback periods on these wells were very strong because the average well probably produced maybe 500 barrels a day of oil in addition to the gas. And so that's worked out that much better and call these wells roughly in this area that I'm speaking to that we called out roughly in terms of the outperformance, about a dozen wells. I wouldn't tell you that characteristically, there's some things on the subsurface level that are different from other areas of Giddings, but that's not – that's not a new statement that I would make, I mean Giddings is not necessarily homogenous [ph]. There are different areas of Giddings throughout the field. This particular area has its own characteristics, and I'm not going to get into too much of it. But nevertheless, the performance was very good, both oil and gas beyond our expectations. I mentioned the shallower rates of decline, and frankly, just based on, I mentioned the returns a little bit, but you're looking at F&D costs for these wells that are in the high single digits on a per barrel basis. So that's sort of what I would say. I mean, I think we're being conservative to some extent in terms of how we've evaluated this position and we'll know more as we see more well results. But it's a new area, but there are other new areas for us in Giddings too. I mean there's commonly new areas that we'll be able to speak to with more time. So we'll study this a little further in order to get a better understanding of what happened or what might have surprised us. But I think we're obviously very encouraged, very enthusiastic about what's happened just in terms of the results. And as I was driving home last night, I thought to myself, wow, would I rather have had this circumstance of outperformance, where we could lean on it a little bit and driving the better production growth expectations for the year with less capital. Would I rather have these circumstances at $80 oil? Or would I have rather had these circumstances at sub-$60 oil? And as you can imagine, I'll take it as it is because in this environment, this is working out just fine for us. So hopefully, that gives you a little color.