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1
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Tonight on
The Curse of Oak Island...
2
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‐Oh, wow, look at that.
Oh, it is a timber!
3
00:00:05,547 --> 00:00:07,215
It's a timber!
4
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We don't have any structures
like this on any of our maps.
5
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This could be some
of the early workings.
6
00:00:11,720 --> 00:00:14,055
This painting was an instrument
7
00:00:14,056 --> 00:00:16,098
to record a secret
about Oak Island.
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I would dig
9
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where the shepherd points.
10
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‐ Wow!
Lots of wood.
11
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‐ We're on a corner.
The Money Pit's
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00:00:22,648 --> 00:00:24,607
‐14 feet away.
‐That's stunning.
13
00:00:24,608 --> 00:00:25,900
I mean, that's zeroing in.
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The Money Pit
may no longer be lost.
15
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There is an island
in the North Atlantic
16
00:00:34,493 --> 00:00:37,995
where people have been looking
for an incredible treasure
17
00:00:37,996 --> 00:00:41,290
for more than 200 years.
18
00:00:41,291 --> 00:00:44,377
So far, they have found
a stone slab
19
00:00:44,378 --> 00:00:47,046
with strange symbols
carved into it,
20
00:00:47,047 --> 00:00:49,882
mysterious fragments
of human bone,
21
00:00:49,883 --> 00:00:53,636
and a lead cross
whose origin may stretch back
22
00:00:53,637 --> 00:00:56,222
to the days
of the Knights Templar.
23
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To date, six men have died
trying to solve the mystery.
24
00:01:01,728 --> 00:01:03,854
And, according to legend,
25
00:01:03,855 --> 00:01:06,941
one more will have to die
26
00:01:06,942 --> 00:01:10,571
before the treasure
can be found.
27
00:01:39,474 --> 00:01:43,352
That's a substantial amount
of water coming through there.
28
00:01:43,353 --> 00:01:45,688
Am I seeing things,
or is there,
29
00:01:45,689 --> 00:01:47,857
like, a bunch of cobble?
30
00:01:47,858 --> 00:01:49,650
I do see
a bunch of cobble, yeah.
31
00:01:49,651 --> 00:01:51,027
Quite distinctive, isn't it?
32
00:01:51,028 --> 00:01:52,403
Those rocks look like
33
00:01:52,404 --> 00:01:53,612
they've been placed there.
34
00:01:53,613 --> 00:01:54,905
‐Yeah.
‐On purpose.
35
00:01:54,906 --> 00:01:56,657
Yeah. I think so, too.
36
00:01:56,658 --> 00:01:58,534
Shortly after completing
37
00:01:58,535 --> 00:02:00,619
this 6,000‐square‐foot
extension
38
00:02:00,620 --> 00:02:03,873
to the massive steel cofferdam
at Smith's Cove,
39
00:02:03,874 --> 00:02:07,168
Rick Lagina and members
of the Oak Island team
40
00:02:07,169 --> 00:02:09,170
have already found evidence
of what could be
41
00:02:09,171 --> 00:02:10,756
another breakthrough discovery.
42
00:02:13,800 --> 00:02:16,302
There's a lot of cobble there
and none here.
43
00:02:16,303 --> 00:02:18,471
Like a rock wall.
44
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This is a heck of a start,
or what?
45
00:02:20,223 --> 00:02:22,183
Just moments ago,
46
00:02:22,184 --> 00:02:24,935
while excavating a mysterious
square‐shaped log structure
47
00:02:24,936 --> 00:02:28,814
one that was never reported
by previous treasure hunters
48
00:02:28,815 --> 00:02:31,150
the team unearthed
what they believe
49
00:02:31,151 --> 00:02:33,986
could be part of one
of the five stone box drains.
50
00:02:33,987 --> 00:02:36,405
First discovered in 1850,
51
00:02:36,406 --> 00:02:39,575
the box drains draw ocean water
from the shore,
52
00:02:39,576 --> 00:02:43,162
which is then used to fuel
a booby‐trapped flooding system
53
00:02:43,163 --> 00:02:46,749
which prevents digging in the
area known as the Money Pit.
54
00:02:46,750 --> 00:02:50,211
‐They look like
they've been stacked. ‐Yeah.
55
00:02:50,212 --> 00:02:53,673
I mean, look at how quickly
the water runs out
56
00:02:53,674 --> 00:02:55,007
from the structure.
57
00:02:55,008 --> 00:02:57,927
It's still working today,
you know?
58
00:02:57,928 --> 00:03:00,096
Quite packed in there, Laird.
59
00:03:00,097 --> 00:03:02,056
I'm not gonna make a statement,
60
00:03:02,057 --> 00:03:04,225
but it's... well defined.
61
00:03:04,226 --> 00:03:05,851
I only know one thing, right?
62
00:03:05,852 --> 00:03:08,646
There's a preponderance
of cobble,
63
00:03:08,647 --> 00:03:11,899
but it seems to keep going
that way and that way.
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00:03:11,900 --> 00:03:14,318
Hey, Billy, can you take
a couple scoops of water,
65
00:03:14,319 --> 00:03:15,612
and we can see it better?
66
00:03:19,616 --> 00:03:22,702
Look at the sheer difference of,
like, pure clay
67
00:03:22,703 --> 00:03:24,578
to a mound of rocks.
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00:03:24,579 --> 00:03:26,497
There's definitely more rocks
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00:03:26,498 --> 00:03:27,540
going that way.
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00:03:27,541 --> 00:03:29,376
That pile is continuing.
71
00:03:30,544 --> 00:03:31,877
Wow. Look at that.
72
00:03:31,878 --> 00:03:34,088
So, this is the shaft?
73
00:03:34,089 --> 00:03:36,674
We‐we don't have
any structures like this
74
00:03:36,675 --> 00:03:38,968
on any of our maps, so this is
a new original discovery.
75
00:03:38,969 --> 00:03:41,554
Plus, you've got black organic
material rotting away there.
76
00:03:41,555 --> 00:03:43,306
That's another sign of it.
77
00:03:45,183 --> 00:03:47,393
What's disturbing
about this is that there is
78
00:03:47,394 --> 00:03:49,728
no historical record.
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00:03:49,729 --> 00:03:53,441
Dan did not articulate
having built anything like this.
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00:03:53,442 --> 00:03:55,526
I can't believe
that Mr. Blankenship
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00:03:55,527 --> 00:03:57,736
would have built
such a structure, so...
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00:03:57,737 --> 00:04:00,239
Certainly, uh,
Restall or earlier,
83
00:04:00,240 --> 00:04:02,283
but it begs the question:
84
00:04:02,284 --> 00:04:04,243
how were they able
to get out this far?
85
00:04:04,244 --> 00:04:07,288
I think this,
86
00:04:07,289 --> 00:04:10,040
more than anything else,
it mimics Restall work.
87
00:04:10,041 --> 00:04:13,085
These vertical timbers,
they used that feature a lot.
88
00:04:13,086 --> 00:04:16,088
The only problem I have is,
for this to be Restall work,
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00:04:16,089 --> 00:04:18,757
this is... somebody said
it's underwater.
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00:04:18,758 --> 00:04:21,177
‐So how would they
have gotten here? ‐Yeah.
91
00:04:21,178 --> 00:04:22,595
Yeah.
92
00:04:22,596 --> 00:04:24,930
Bill, you want to hop in
and get this cleaned up?
93
00:04:24,931 --> 00:04:26,265
Yep.
94
00:04:32,647 --> 00:04:34,732
Just like old days.
95
00:04:34,733 --> 00:04:36,609
It is pretty interesting.
Yeah.
96
00:04:36,610 --> 00:04:38,612
They look like
they've been stacked.
97
00:04:40,322 --> 00:04:43,532
Here comes the geologist.
All right!
98
00:04:43,533 --> 00:04:45,701
‐ Oh, wow, look at that.
‐ What do you make of that?
99
00:04:45,702 --> 00:04:47,953
Well, yeah,
I would say people were there.
100
00:04:47,954 --> 00:04:50,415
All right.
‐People piled those boulders up.
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00:04:56,129 --> 00:04:57,713
‐So, the north end
of this, Terry, ‐Right.
102
00:04:57,714 --> 00:04:59,131
is the south end of the slipway.
103
00:04:59,132 --> 00:05:01,467
Oh, we're not to far off there.
I see. Okay.
104
00:05:01,468 --> 00:05:03,928
One year ago,
105
00:05:03,929 --> 00:05:05,971
near the same area
of Smith's Cove...
106
00:05:05,972 --> 00:05:07,473
There's a timber right there.
107
00:05:07,474 --> 00:05:08,891
Wow.
108
00:05:08,892 --> 00:05:10,851
...the team uncovered
the remains
109
00:05:10,852 --> 00:05:13,229
of a wooden slipway,
which would have been used
110
00:05:13,230 --> 00:05:16,190
for hauling boats
in or out of water,
111
00:05:16,191 --> 00:05:20,903
usually for the purpose of
loading, unloading or repair.
112
00:05:20,904 --> 00:05:23,155
When the wood used
to make the slipway
113
00:05:23,156 --> 00:05:26,367
was scientifically dated
using dendrochronology,
114
00:05:26,368 --> 00:05:29,036
it suggested that
it may have been built
115
00:05:29,037 --> 00:05:31,330
as early as 1769,
116
00:05:31,331 --> 00:05:34,667
nearly three decades before
the discovery of the Money Pit
117
00:05:34,668 --> 00:05:36,877
in 1795.
118
00:05:36,878 --> 00:05:39,255
Is it possible that
this recently discovered
119
00:05:39,256 --> 00:05:43,342
rock‐and‐log structure
is related in some way?
120
00:05:43,343 --> 00:05:46,179
But if so, how?
121
00:05:49,391 --> 00:05:52,560
Is that rounded,
or is that a piece of timber?
122
00:05:52,561 --> 00:05:54,604
Let's have a quick look here.
123
00:05:56,773 --> 00:05:58,858
I think it's another bit of,
uh, wood.
124
00:05:58,859 --> 00:06:00,276
Oh, it is a timber!
125
00:06:00,277 --> 00:06:02,529
‐ It's a timber!
Oh, yeah, it is.
126
00:06:04,364 --> 00:06:06,031
What do you think, Terry?
127
00:06:06,032 --> 00:06:08,534
It means that it's part
of a crib‐work, I would say.
128
00:06:08,535 --> 00:06:09,869
That's not natural.
129
00:06:09,870 --> 00:06:11,704
This is the furthest structure
130
00:06:11,705 --> 00:06:13,581
that we've ever found.
131
00:06:13,582 --> 00:06:16,375
‐ Yes. ‐You know, furthest away
from the actual beach.
132
00:06:16,376 --> 00:06:20,838
RICK Well, who
thinks they know what this is?
133
00:06:20,839 --> 00:06:22,715
We have
to keep digging to find out.
134
00:06:22,716 --> 00:06:23,800
Exactly.
135
00:06:26,344 --> 00:06:29,722
For now, it's been a long day.
I think we're done.
136
00:06:29,723 --> 00:06:33,642
Another day, another structure.
137
00:06:33,643 --> 00:06:37,062
Following their
productive search operation
138
00:06:37,063 --> 00:06:38,898
at Smith's Cove,
139
00:06:38,899 --> 00:06:42,234
Rick, Craig and other members
of the team gather
140
00:06:42,235 --> 00:06:43,569
in the war room.
141
00:06:43,570 --> 00:06:44,653
They are eager to share
142
00:06:44,654 --> 00:06:46,488
the news of today's findings
143
00:06:46,489 --> 00:06:49,158
with Rick's brother Marty,
who is away on business.
144
00:06:49,159 --> 00:06:51,160
‐Hey. How you doing?
‐Hey, Marty.
145
00:06:51,161 --> 00:06:52,453
Good. Whatcha got?
146
00:06:52,454 --> 00:06:53,996
Well, Marty,
I'm just following up,
147
00:06:53,997 --> 00:06:55,831
those pictures that I sent you
148
00:06:55,832 --> 00:06:58,000
‐about the Smith Cove's work?
‐Yes.
149
00:06:58,001 --> 00:07:01,128
Just wanted to explain
the‐the pictures, really.
150
00:07:01,129 --> 00:07:04,590
Remember Mike Jardine showed us
those box‐like features
151
00:07:04,591 --> 00:07:06,258
at surface?
152
00:07:06,259 --> 00:07:08,093
Yeah, I sure do,
before he even started.
153
00:07:08,094 --> 00:07:10,721
‐Yep, I do.
‐We've exposed them now.
154
00:07:10,722 --> 00:07:13,223
The curious thing
that is on the back side,
155
00:07:13,224 --> 00:07:15,017
the seaward side of the box,
156
00:07:15,018 --> 00:07:17,519
there's a tremendous amount
of rockwork,
157
00:07:17,520 --> 00:07:21,690
and that really is the most
interesting feature to date.
158
00:07:21,691 --> 00:07:24,610
We still have to decide if we
want to dig inside the box.
159
00:07:24,611 --> 00:07:26,278
Yeah, so, the rockwork
160
00:07:26,279 --> 00:07:29,114
outside the box,
do you think that's...
161
00:07:29,115 --> 00:07:31,825
different time,
or associated with it?
162
00:07:31,826 --> 00:07:34,662
It appears
as though it's extensive.
163
00:07:34,663 --> 00:07:36,163
It was quite laborious.
164
00:07:36,164 --> 00:07:38,791
But what it means
and its relation to the box,
165
00:07:38,792 --> 00:07:40,793
I don't think
I can time‐frame that.
166
00:07:40,794 --> 00:07:42,711
‐Not yet.
‐But it could have been
167
00:07:42,712 --> 00:07:44,922
that they were digging down
to‐to find a way
168
00:07:44,923 --> 00:07:47,174
to shut off the water,
you know, the age‐old thing.
169
00:07:47,175 --> 00:07:50,177
Or it could be one of the...
170
00:07:50,178 --> 00:07:53,555
‐one of the last finger drain
systems in Smith's Cove. ‐Yeah.
171
00:07:53,556 --> 00:07:55,391
Entirely possible.
Go dig 'em up.
172
00:07:56,851 --> 00:07:58,727
This area, because it's
outside Dan's cofferdam,
173
00:07:58,728 --> 00:08:00,312
it's really interesting.
174
00:08:00,313 --> 00:08:02,815
I know Dan...
really liked this area.
175
00:08:02,816 --> 00:08:05,234
He always thought
it was leaking in this area,
176
00:08:05,235 --> 00:08:07,277
the... from the flood tunnel
or something.
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00:08:07,278 --> 00:08:08,904
There was water coming out
178
00:08:08,905 --> 00:08:10,989
when he had his cofferdam
in here, so...
179
00:08:10,990 --> 00:08:12,741
hopefully,
we can get down deeper
180
00:08:12,742 --> 00:08:15,494
and get in these rocks and...
and find out what it is.
181
00:08:15,495 --> 00:08:17,204
Okay. Well,
it was a good start.
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00:08:17,205 --> 00:08:19,331
At least you found
something already unknown...
183
00:08:19,332 --> 00:08:21,458
‐hitherto unknown.
‐Yeah.
184
00:08:21,459 --> 00:08:23,460
I really didn't think
we'd discover
185
00:08:23,461 --> 00:08:26,338
something as massive as what
we found in the bump out.
186
00:08:26,339 --> 00:08:28,424
When I see these timbers,
187
00:08:28,425 --> 00:08:31,009
um, you know,
these are substantial.
188
00:08:31,010 --> 00:08:33,178
And Rick tells me
that also there was
189
00:08:33,179 --> 00:08:36,014
an enormous amount of rock
associated with it, too,
190
00:08:36,015 --> 00:08:37,891
that he took out by hand.
191
00:08:37,892 --> 00:08:41,019
This is yet another,
yet another structure
192
00:08:41,020 --> 00:08:43,605
in Smith's Cove,
so I'm impressed.
193
00:08:43,606 --> 00:08:45,733
It's just the beginning
of Smith's Cove,
194
00:08:45,734 --> 00:08:47,943
and the hope is that it
will reveal some things
195
00:08:47,944 --> 00:08:50,487
that to this point are unknown.
196
00:08:50,488 --> 00:08:52,239
I say dig, Craig, Rick,
197
00:08:52,240 --> 00:08:54,867
Billy, Doug, dig!
198
00:08:54,868 --> 00:08:56,243
Let's get to the bottom of it.
199
00:08:56,244 --> 00:08:58,954
That's the hope,
and‐and, uh, we'll...
200
00:08:58,955 --> 00:09:00,914
‐dig away, as you say.
‐Yeah, Rick,
201
00:09:00,915 --> 00:09:03,208
you're off to a really good
start, and I'll be out there
202
00:09:03,209 --> 00:09:06,086
just as soon as I can, 'cause I
don't want to miss all the fun.
203
00:09:06,087 --> 00:09:07,713
All righty. See ya.
204
00:09:07,714 --> 00:09:09,799
‐See you guys. Thanks.
See you, Marty.
205
00:09:14,429 --> 00:09:16,930
As a new day begins
on Oak Island,
206
00:09:16,931 --> 00:09:19,141
Jack Begley
and historian Doug Crowell
207
00:09:19,142 --> 00:09:21,602
have joined
archaeologist Laird Niven
208
00:09:21,603 --> 00:09:25,272
and other members of the team
at Smith's Cove
209
00:09:25,273 --> 00:09:26,899
to continue their investigation
210
00:09:26,900 --> 00:09:30,444
of the mysterious
wooden structure.
211
00:09:30,445 --> 00:09:32,946
To get down to the depth
we need to get down to,
212
00:09:32,947 --> 00:09:34,740
we almost have to take out a...
213
00:09:34,741 --> 00:09:36,909
a little bit more with
the excavator, don't you think?
214
00:09:36,910 --> 00:09:40,496
Do you want
to come onto a linear section
215
00:09:40,497 --> 00:09:44,917
of the box drain undisturbed,
or do you want to cut through
216
00:09:44,918 --> 00:09:47,753
‐and then try to find it?
‐Well, that's up for debate.
217
00:09:47,754 --> 00:09:49,463
I'm inclined
to try and cut through it
218
00:09:49,464 --> 00:09:50,923
and then find it
in the sidewall.
219
00:09:50,924 --> 00:09:52,925
I'll peel back in
a little bit. Yeah.
220
00:09:52,926 --> 00:09:54,760
Yeah, but not too far,
because yeah,
221
00:09:54,761 --> 00:09:57,846
‐this is where...
what we're focusing on. ‐Yeah. Yep.
222
00:09:57,847 --> 00:09:59,348
Yeah.
223
00:09:59,349 --> 00:10:02,893
Using a 40‐ton excavator,
224
00:10:02,894 --> 00:10:06,105
Billy Gerhardt will carefully
dig along the suspected path
225
00:10:06,106 --> 00:10:08,357
of the rock feature
in the hopes
226
00:10:08,358 --> 00:10:10,943
that by exposing more of the
structure, they can confirm
227
00:10:10,944 --> 00:10:13,821
whether it is, in fact,
connected to a flood tunnel
228
00:10:13,822 --> 00:10:15,697
a flood tunnel
229
00:10:15,698 --> 00:10:19,785
that would lead directly
to the original Money Pit.
230
00:10:19,786 --> 00:10:22,621
Sounds like he's
hitting rocks there.
231
00:10:22,622 --> 00:10:25,124
That's a good sign,
then, isn't it?
232
00:10:25,125 --> 00:10:27,626
Are you okay with me metal
detecting over this, Laird?
233
00:10:27,627 --> 00:10:29,336
‐Yep.
‐Okay.
234
00:10:29,337 --> 00:10:30,838
When Billy's finished,
235
00:10:30,839 --> 00:10:33,006
I'll give it a little search.
236
00:10:33,007 --> 00:10:37,344
I've been chomping at the bit
to get back to Smith's Cove.
237
00:10:37,345 --> 00:10:39,138
We didn't have a lot of success
238
00:10:39,139 --> 00:10:41,682
with coins
and artifacts last year,
239
00:10:41,683 --> 00:10:43,267
but this is the year.
240
00:10:43,268 --> 00:10:45,310
You ready, Billy?
241
00:10:45,311 --> 00:10:47,021
‐Yep.
Here we go, Jack.
242
00:10:56,322 --> 00:10:58,657
There's a hit here.
It's just tough
243
00:10:58,658 --> 00:11:00,492
to see what it is.
244
00:11:00,493 --> 00:11:03,204
This is probably iron.
245
00:11:06,541 --> 00:11:08,584
You can feel it?
Yeah.
246
00:11:08,585 --> 00:11:10,335
I'm getting something,
but it seems to be
247
00:11:10,336 --> 00:11:12,213
all over the place.
248
00:11:13,631 --> 00:11:15,007
Wow.
249
00:11:15,008 --> 00:11:17,177
This is fantastic.
250
00:11:18,511 --> 00:11:20,888
Yeah!
It's definitely an old piece
251
00:11:20,889 --> 00:11:22,890
of wrought iron here.
252
00:11:22,891 --> 00:11:24,433
That's a cool little find.
253
00:11:24,434 --> 00:11:26,810
‐Structural, right?
Yeah, that's cool.
254
00:11:26,811 --> 00:11:29,354
They look very similar
to what you found last year
255
00:11:29,355 --> 00:11:30,981
‐along the slipway.
‐Yeah.
256
00:11:30,982 --> 00:11:32,733
Right in line.
And that's where we found
257
00:11:32,734 --> 00:11:36,111
all those old cribbing spikes
from 1600s, 1700s.
258
00:11:36,112 --> 00:11:38,113
A cribbing spike?
259
00:11:38,114 --> 00:11:41,533
Similar to the ones found
within the 18th‐century slipway
260
00:11:41,534 --> 00:11:44,036
that was unearthed
in this area last year
261
00:11:44,037 --> 00:11:47,206
and which blacksmithing expert
Carmen Legge suggested
262
00:11:47,207 --> 00:11:50,250
could be as much
as 400 years old?
263
00:11:50,251 --> 00:11:52,878
Could Gary and Jack
have just found
264
00:11:52,879 --> 00:11:54,546
further evidence to suggest
265
00:11:54,547 --> 00:11:56,965
that the mysterious
log structure was made
266
00:11:56,966 --> 00:12:01,386
before the discovery
of the Money Pit in 1795?
267
00:12:01,387 --> 00:12:03,388
This is the start
of something good, mate.
268
00:12:03,389 --> 00:12:05,057
Mm‐hmm.
269
00:12:05,058 --> 00:12:07,226
‐Hey, Rick.
‐ Hey, Rick.
270
00:12:07,227 --> 00:12:08,560
Hey. How can we help?
271
00:12:08,561 --> 00:12:10,771
We've already found
272
00:12:10,772 --> 00:12:12,231
a couple of things here,
273
00:12:12,232 --> 00:12:15,525
and I'm sure
you'll recognize these.
274
00:12:15,526 --> 00:12:17,611
‐And I believe...
‐Yeah.
275
00:12:17,612 --> 00:12:19,238
This is the only area
276
00:12:19,239 --> 00:12:22,574
we found
those old cribbing spikes beside
277
00:12:22,575 --> 00:12:26,411
of the slipway,
and it was found down there.
278
00:12:26,412 --> 00:12:28,247
It's in really good shape.
279
00:12:28,248 --> 00:12:30,916
Oh, yeah. That's an old piece
of iron, as well.
280
00:12:30,917 --> 00:12:33,210
You can actually see it.
I think it...
281
00:12:33,211 --> 00:12:37,214
The hand hammered,
you know, right here.
282
00:12:37,215 --> 00:12:40,092
All the little dimples.
283
00:12:40,093 --> 00:12:42,261
‐Right here.
‐Yeah. It's in great shape.
284
00:12:42,262 --> 00:12:45,931
And we haven't gone
that far down in this area.
285
00:12:45,932 --> 00:12:49,142
Gary comes up
with a cribbing spike that he
286
00:12:49,143 --> 00:12:51,770
suspects could be
from the 17th century.
287
00:12:51,771 --> 00:12:55,274
And we're always looking
to have one data set,
288
00:12:55,275 --> 00:12:57,567
if you will,
reinforce another data set.
289
00:12:57,568 --> 00:12:59,278
So we have this
290
00:12:59,279 --> 00:13:02,155
dendrochronology date of 1769.
291
00:13:02,156 --> 00:13:04,533
Certainly fits
within that bracket.
292
00:13:04,534 --> 00:13:07,494
And I ask myself,
is it original work,
293
00:13:07,495 --> 00:13:09,371
or is it searcher work?
294
00:13:09,372 --> 00:13:12,291
We know the myriad number
295
00:13:12,292 --> 00:13:14,376
of structures
that we've found down here.
296
00:13:14,377 --> 00:13:16,336
‐Mm‐hmm. ‐There's nothing says that
this is the singular one.
297
00:13:16,337 --> 00:13:18,547
Might be something over here.
Over there.
298
00:13:18,548 --> 00:13:21,300
There.
So we have to take our time
299
00:13:21,301 --> 00:13:24,636
and really analyze what we see
300
00:13:24,637 --> 00:13:27,306
‐and just take it slow.
‐Yeah.
301
00:13:27,307 --> 00:13:30,058
I feel good
about how it's going so far.
302
00:13:30,059 --> 00:13:31,853
Good. Very good.
303
00:13:34,188 --> 00:13:38,358
After finishing the day's work
at Smith's Cove...
304
00:13:38,359 --> 00:13:41,486
‐ Hey, guys. ‐ Corjan.
Welcome to Oak Island.
305
00:13:41,487 --> 00:13:44,072
Brothers Rick and Marty Lagina,
306
00:13:44,073 --> 00:13:47,284
along with members of the team,
meet with Oak Island researcher
307
00:13:47,285 --> 00:13:49,911
and theorist Corjan Mol
in the war room.
308
00:13:49,912 --> 00:13:53,290
Corjan has recently intrigued
the Laginas with the notion
309
00:13:53,291 --> 00:13:55,500
that a French artist
used his paintings
310
00:13:55,501 --> 00:13:58,503
to plant clues
as to the location
311
00:13:58,504 --> 00:13:59,881
of the Oak Island treasure.
312
00:14:00,882 --> 00:14:03,134
Thanks for the invitation.
313
00:14:04,343 --> 00:14:06,386
Okay, there we are.
314
00:14:06,387 --> 00:14:08,847
So, this is, uh,
Nicolas Poussin.
315
00:14:08,848 --> 00:14:10,682
Now, if you look at the mystery,
316
00:14:10,683 --> 00:14:13,518
first, you need to know
some things about Poussin.
317
00:14:13,519 --> 00:14:15,353
Nicolas Poussin is‐is a...
318
00:14:15,354 --> 00:14:18,356
Well, he's actually
the classical painter.
319
00:14:18,357 --> 00:14:20,025
Some of his works are, uh,
320
00:14:20,026 --> 00:14:21,860
incredibly famous
and are in the big museums.
321
00:14:21,861 --> 00:14:23,445
And from my perspective,
322
00:14:23,446 --> 00:14:25,530
you know,
he‐he was an instrument
323
00:14:25,531 --> 00:14:27,449
to, uh, record a secret
324
00:14:27,450 --> 00:14:28,785
about Oak Island.
325
00:14:32,371 --> 00:14:35,540
Born in 1594,
326
00:14:35,541 --> 00:14:38,376
Nicolas Poussin became
one of the preeminent painters
327
00:14:38,377 --> 00:14:40,712
of the classical
French baroque style
328
00:14:40,713 --> 00:14:42,714
during the 17th century.
329
00:14:42,715 --> 00:14:45,258
In addition to serving
as the First Painter
330
00:14:45,259 --> 00:14:47,552
to King Louis XIII of France,
331
00:14:47,553 --> 00:14:49,596
Poussin spent much
of his career
332
00:14:49,597 --> 00:14:51,890
living and working in Rome,
333
00:14:51,891 --> 00:14:54,226
where his patrons included
powerful nobles,
334
00:14:54,227 --> 00:14:56,103
Catholic church officials
335
00:14:56,104 --> 00:14:58,438
and even the pope.
336
00:14:58,439 --> 00:15:01,108
But according to
Corjan Mol's research,
337
00:15:01,109 --> 00:15:03,235
three of Poussin's
prominent paintings
338
00:15:03,236 --> 00:15:06,071
may have been created
with a secret purpose:
339
00:15:06,072 --> 00:15:10,242
to offer clues about a treasure
buried on Oak Island.
340
00:15:10,243 --> 00:15:13,245
The first of these
is believed to appear
341
00:15:13,246 --> 00:15:16,748
in the 1627 painting
Shepherds of Arcadia,
342
00:15:16,749 --> 00:15:18,792
which depicts a group
of shepherds
343
00:15:18,793 --> 00:15:22,587
gathered around a stone tomb
inscribed with the phrase
344
00:15:22,588 --> 00:15:25,757
"et in Arcadia ego."
345
00:15:25,758 --> 00:15:28,135
If you look at the painting,
346
00:15:28,136 --> 00:15:30,762
the shepherd is pointing
at the phrase,
347
00:15:30,763 --> 00:15:33,390
"et in Arcadia ego."
348
00:15:33,391 --> 00:15:36,434
It's a special phrase,
and perhaps it's an anagram.
349
00:15:36,435 --> 00:15:38,478
So, an anagram is a word
or a phrase that uses
350
00:15:38,479 --> 00:15:40,355
the same letters
in a different order.
351
00:15:40,356 --> 00:15:42,482
Now,
352
00:15:42,483 --> 00:15:45,610
"et in Arcadia ego"
could be an anagram for, uh,
353
00:15:45,611 --> 00:15:48,989
in Italian, uh,
"Gite neo Arcadia."
354
00:15:48,990 --> 00:15:50,950
Excursion to new Arcadia.
355
00:15:52,702 --> 00:15:55,370
In 1523,
356
00:15:55,371 --> 00:15:58,290
Italian explorer
Giovanni da Verrazzano
357
00:15:58,291 --> 00:16:00,876
led an expedition
to North America
358
00:16:00,877 --> 00:16:04,045
on behalf
of King Francis I of France.
359
00:16:04,046 --> 00:16:07,299
After making landfall
in North Carolina,
360
00:16:07,300 --> 00:16:10,886
Verrazzano sailed northward
along the Atlantic coast,
361
00:16:10,887 --> 00:16:13,680
a region
which he later called Arcadia,
362
00:16:13,681 --> 00:16:17,058
a name meaning "refuge"
or "paradise" in Greek.
363
00:16:17,059 --> 00:16:19,644
During the 17th century,
364
00:16:19,645 --> 00:16:21,688
this was later changed
to Acadia
365
00:16:21,689 --> 00:16:24,941
by the French cartographer
Samuel de Champlain
366
00:16:24,942 --> 00:16:26,860
to refer
to the coastal colonies
367
00:16:26,861 --> 00:16:28,653
of New France in Canada,
368
00:16:28,654 --> 00:16:30,781
which included Nova Scotia.
369
00:16:33,159 --> 00:16:35,493
Now, Poussin paints
370
00:16:35,494 --> 00:16:37,579
another work at the same time:
371
00:16:37,580 --> 00:16:41,499
Midas washing his feet
in the river Pactolus.
372
00:16:41,500 --> 00:16:43,835
And these two works
belong together.
373
00:16:43,836 --> 00:16:45,212
They call that pendants.
374
00:16:45,213 --> 00:16:47,339
So these were supposed
to hang together.
375
00:16:47,340 --> 00:16:50,008
The story is
that when Midas washed himself,
376
00:16:50,009 --> 00:16:52,010
the gold, uh,
came into the river.
377
00:16:52,011 --> 00:16:55,222
And from that moment,
it was a gold river.
378
00:16:55,223 --> 00:16:56,515
A gold‐bearing river.
379
00:16:59,018 --> 00:17:01,061
It is Corjan's belief
380
00:17:01,062 --> 00:17:03,480
that Poussin's second painting
in his trilogy
381
00:17:03,481 --> 00:17:06,691
offered a deliberate reference
to the Gold River,
382
00:17:06,692 --> 00:17:10,362
which is located just north
of Oak Island
383
00:17:10,363 --> 00:17:13,531
and was also the site
of a gold rush in the mid‐1800s
384
00:17:13,532 --> 00:17:17,369
after large deposits
were discovered there.
385
00:17:17,370 --> 00:17:19,537
Almost ten years later,
386
00:17:19,538 --> 00:17:22,207
he paints the scene again.
387
00:17:22,208 --> 00:17:25,543
And Poussin used a pentagram
as the basis
388
00:17:25,544 --> 00:17:28,130
for the Shepherds of Arcadia,
the second version.
389
00:17:29,674 --> 00:17:31,216
A common practice
390
00:17:31,217 --> 00:17:32,884
in 17th century painting
391
00:17:32,885 --> 00:17:35,554
was to use geometric shapes
as a means
392
00:17:35,555 --> 00:17:38,431
of basing a painting's
overall composition.
393
00:17:38,432 --> 00:17:41,226
Most often, this was done
for aesthetic purposes,
394
00:17:41,227 --> 00:17:42,894
but Corjan is convinced
395
00:17:42,895 --> 00:17:45,438
that Poussin intended
the shape embedded
396
00:17:45,439 --> 00:17:49,234
within his painting to serve
as a kind of treasure map.
397
00:17:49,235 --> 00:17:52,696
One which, when combined
with the megalithic formation
398
00:17:52,697 --> 00:17:56,575
known as Nolan's Cross, points
to a possible treasure site
399
00:17:56,576 --> 00:17:59,244
in the Oak Island swamp.
400
00:17:59,245 --> 00:18:01,788
I thought if you look
at Nolan's Cross,
401
00:18:01,789 --> 00:18:03,623
there's five dots,
402
00:18:03,624 --> 00:18:05,959
and you only need four
to make a cross.
403
00:18:05,960 --> 00:18:09,004
‐ Mm‐hmm. ‐ So the fifth
might be what you need
404
00:18:09,005 --> 00:18:12,924
to place a pentagram
on Nolan's Cross.
405
00:18:12,925 --> 00:18:15,594
So, this point
is where the shepherds point.
406
00:18:15,595 --> 00:18:18,263
If you superimpose
the painting,
407
00:18:18,264 --> 00:18:21,558
this would be the placement.
408
00:18:21,559 --> 00:18:23,393
Wow.
409
00:18:23,394 --> 00:18:26,438
That is pretty cool that
that pops out. It really is.
410
00:18:26,439 --> 00:18:27,856
You think that these paintings
411
00:18:27,857 --> 00:18:29,816
actually say that
412
00:18:29,817 --> 00:18:31,610
the treasure came
to Nova Scotia?
413
00:18:31,611 --> 00:18:33,612
But it also could have been
414
00:18:33,613 --> 00:18:35,947
‐on Oak Island
that it was deposited? ‐ Yes.
415
00:18:35,948 --> 00:18:37,198
Yes. Yeah.
416
00:18:37,199 --> 00:18:38,617
Look,
417
00:18:38,618 --> 00:18:40,785
I've always felt that,
418
00:18:40,786 --> 00:18:41,995
and I think we spoke earlier
419
00:18:41,996 --> 00:18:43,622
when we first discussed things,
420
00:18:43,623 --> 00:18:46,041
that there was something
in the swamp.
421
00:18:46,042 --> 00:18:48,793
My question to you is
since you are intrigued,
422
00:18:48,794 --> 00:18:51,463
what is here, in your opinion?
423
00:18:51,464 --> 00:18:53,548
I believe the ark was found,
424
00:18:53,549 --> 00:18:56,301
uh, by the Templars in, uh...
after 1099.
425
00:18:56,302 --> 00:18:58,471
And I'm convinced it came here.
426
00:19:01,307 --> 00:19:03,350
The Ark of the Covenant
427
00:19:03,351 --> 00:19:05,644
buried on Oak Island?
428
00:19:05,645 --> 00:19:07,979
For decades,
numerous Oak Island
429
00:19:07,980 --> 00:19:10,023
researchers and historians
430
00:19:10,024 --> 00:19:12,025
have theorized
that while fighting for control
431
00:19:12,026 --> 00:19:14,486
of the Holy Land
during the Crusades,
432
00:19:14,487 --> 00:19:15,987
members of the Knights Templar
433
00:19:15,988 --> 00:19:18,782
also conducted
secret excavations at the site
434
00:19:18,783 --> 00:19:20,992
of King Solomon's Temple
435
00:19:20,993 --> 00:19:23,328
and removed numerous
sacred religious relics,
436
00:19:23,329 --> 00:19:25,163
including a golden menorah
437
00:19:25,164 --> 00:19:27,832
and the Ark of the Covenant.
438
00:19:27,833 --> 00:19:30,543
It has also been speculated
439
00:19:30,544 --> 00:19:32,170
that after facing persecution
440
00:19:32,171 --> 00:19:34,714
in Europe
in the early 14th century,
441
00:19:34,715 --> 00:19:36,966
the surviving members
of the Templar order
442
00:19:36,967 --> 00:19:39,803
fled to North America,
taking with them
443
00:19:39,804 --> 00:19:43,682
not only these sacred treasures
but also a fortune in gold
444
00:19:43,683 --> 00:19:46,643
and buried them on Oak Island.
445
00:19:46,644 --> 00:19:49,104
Could Corjan Mol's
incredible theory
446
00:19:49,105 --> 00:19:51,940
that Nicolas Poussin
had secret knowledge
447
00:19:51,941 --> 00:19:54,359
of these Templar treasures
and that he used that knowledge
448
00:19:54,360 --> 00:19:57,278
to embed clues in three
of his most iconic paintings
449
00:19:57,279 --> 00:19:59,906
offer evidence
that the Templar theory
450
00:19:59,907 --> 00:20:02,117
might be true?
451
00:20:02,118 --> 00:20:04,703
Very interesting.
I mean, the connections
452
00:20:04,704 --> 00:20:06,746
you can make
with conventional history
453
00:20:06,747 --> 00:20:09,874
‐are really amazing, you know?
‐There's no end to it.
454
00:20:09,875 --> 00:20:11,876
I mean, with all the data
we have now
455
00:20:11,877 --> 00:20:13,837
from Steve's work...
So we should be able to...
456
00:20:13,838 --> 00:20:16,214
‐line that up.
‐Yeah.
457
00:20:16,215 --> 00:20:19,092
Well, Corjan,
I've always felt that
458
00:20:19,093 --> 00:20:21,511
it's through collaboration
and cooperation
459
00:20:21,512 --> 00:20:24,264
that this will ultimately be
best served.
460
00:20:24,265 --> 00:20:27,434
So, to that end,
we can but say thank you.
461
00:20:27,435 --> 00:20:29,186
‐ Thank you.
‐ Thank you very much.
462
00:20:35,025 --> 00:20:38,027
One day
after the team's meeting
463
00:20:38,028 --> 00:20:40,447
with Oak Island theorist
Corjan Mol...
464
00:20:40,448 --> 00:20:43,324
Actually, I'm probably gonna
start digging this shaft out.
465
00:20:43,325 --> 00:20:46,995
...Jack Begley and Gary Drayton
continue digging
466
00:20:46,996 --> 00:20:50,999
inside the box‐like wooden
structure at Smith's Cove
467
00:20:51,000 --> 00:20:52,584
in the hopes
of finding evidence
468
00:20:52,585 --> 00:20:55,086
of one
of the fabled stone box drains.
469
00:20:55,087 --> 00:20:57,714
What I like about this area,
what we're digging in now,
470
00:20:57,715 --> 00:21:00,800
there's no photos
of what it used to look like.
471
00:21:00,801 --> 00:21:02,510
Yeah.
472
00:21:02,511 --> 00:21:05,096
Never dug this deep.
473
00:21:05,097 --> 00:21:07,974
Yeah.
474
00:21:07,975 --> 00:21:12,228
Meanwhile,
at the triangle‐shaped swamp...
475
00:21:12,229 --> 00:21:13,730
‐Morning, Don.
‐Good morning.
476
00:21:13,731 --> 00:21:15,398
‐Sorry about the weather.
477
00:21:15,399 --> 00:21:17,066
You're gonna get wet.
478
00:21:17,067 --> 00:21:19,027
...Rick Lagina,
479
00:21:19,028 --> 00:21:20,945
surveyor Steve Guptill
and local diver
480
00:21:20,946 --> 00:21:22,697
Tony Sampson welcome back
481
00:21:22,698 --> 00:21:25,700
ground‐penetrating radar
experts Don Johnston
482
00:21:25,701 --> 00:21:27,076
and Steve Watson.
483
00:21:27,077 --> 00:21:29,245
They are curious to find out
484
00:21:29,246 --> 00:21:32,040
if the possible treasure sites
Corjan Mol identified
485
00:21:32,041 --> 00:21:35,376
in the swamp are worth
further investigation.
486
00:21:35,377 --> 00:21:38,129
So, uh, Tony's been kind enough
to assist us,
487
00:21:38,130 --> 00:21:40,465
and I think that he's gonna be
a great boon to the effort here.
488
00:21:40,466 --> 00:21:43,676
The hope is that Steve and I
will be in the water.
489
00:21:43,677 --> 00:21:45,595
We'll run the run the line.
490
00:21:45,596 --> 00:21:47,514
Tony will be in the boat
with you.
491
00:21:47,515 --> 00:21:49,766
We'll do a hand‐over‐hand pull.
492
00:21:49,767 --> 00:21:51,976
Try to keep it
consistent travel.
493
00:21:51,977 --> 00:21:54,229
And, uh, then you're gonna have
to tell us
494
00:21:54,230 --> 00:21:55,980
‐if it's working or not.
And then we'll tweak... ‐Yeah.
495
00:21:55,981 --> 00:21:57,357
We'll tweak the system.
496
00:21:57,358 --> 00:21:59,192
‐Yeah. ‐All right.
‐ Okay.
497
00:21:59,193 --> 00:22:01,069
Although Rick and Marty
conducted
498
00:22:01,070 --> 00:22:04,489
extensive seismic testing
across the swamp last year,
499
00:22:04,490 --> 00:22:07,492
which revealed
a 200‐foot‐long anomaly,
500
00:22:07,493 --> 00:22:09,285
they are hoping
501
00:22:09,286 --> 00:22:11,162
that additional scanning
will help better define
502
00:22:11,163 --> 00:22:12,789
existing targets
503
00:22:12,790 --> 00:22:15,166
and possibly identify new ones.
504
00:22:15,167 --> 00:22:17,043
The other years, you know,
505
00:22:17,044 --> 00:22:18,962
we were in there
doing investigative work,
506
00:22:18,963 --> 00:22:21,381
and we didn't
we didn't have an inkling
507
00:22:21,382 --> 00:22:23,508
as to what may
or may not be in there.
508
00:22:23,509 --> 00:22:28,054
But now we have real reason
to‐to gather great data,
509
00:22:28,055 --> 00:22:29,305
corroborative data,
at this point.
510
00:22:29,306 --> 00:22:31,933
So there's a lot more incentive
511
00:22:31,934 --> 00:22:33,643
‐to get back in there.
‐Yeah.
512
00:22:33,644 --> 00:22:36,938
We believe
there's something there, but...
513
00:22:36,939 --> 00:22:38,982
it's all about expectation
management. We have to prove it.
514
00:22:38,983 --> 00:22:40,984
Just like finding the one thing
in the Money Pit.
515
00:22:40,985 --> 00:22:43,570
We have to prove
that that's a real anomaly.
516
00:22:43,571 --> 00:22:44,988
Okay. We're all ready to go.
517
00:22:44,989 --> 00:22:47,073
‐Got it? You got it?
‐Yeah. Yeah.
518
00:22:47,074 --> 00:22:51,077
Ground‐penetrating radar,
or GPR,
519
00:22:51,078 --> 00:22:53,913
sends electromagnetic pulses
into the earth
520
00:22:53,914 --> 00:22:55,707
to detect changes in soil
521
00:22:55,708 --> 00:22:58,459
that could indicate
any structures or objects
522
00:22:58,460 --> 00:23:00,795
buried deep
beneath the surface.
523
00:23:00,796 --> 00:23:03,256
‐Ready?
‐Yep.
524
00:23:03,257 --> 00:23:05,049
In order to apply
this technology
525
00:23:05,050 --> 00:23:07,468
in a wetland environment
like the swamp,
526
00:23:07,469 --> 00:23:09,387
the GPR team will conduct
527
00:23:09,388 --> 00:23:13,016
their scan by boat
with the help of Tony Sampson.
528
00:23:13,017 --> 00:23:15,059
Meanwhile, Rick Lagina
529
00:23:15,060 --> 00:23:16,686
and Steve Guptill
will guide the team
530
00:23:16,687 --> 00:23:17,979
along a systematic grid pattern
531
00:23:17,980 --> 00:23:20,440
using rope lines.
532
00:23:20,441 --> 00:23:22,609
Went off a little bit.
533
00:23:22,610 --> 00:23:24,152
Come back left.
534
00:23:24,153 --> 00:23:25,403
There you go.
535
00:23:25,404 --> 00:23:26,654
Corjan Mol has done
536
00:23:26,655 --> 00:23:28,656
an incredible job of research,
537
00:23:28,657 --> 00:23:33,119
and the swamp is a very
specific location of interest.
538
00:23:33,120 --> 00:23:35,121
It's more than interesting.
It's certainly
539
00:23:35,122 --> 00:23:37,498
something we have
to follow up on.
540
00:23:37,499 --> 00:23:40,001
And I'm hoping
that GPR will get
541
00:23:40,002 --> 00:23:42,754
two things: one, to get
a baseline reading of the swamp
542
00:23:42,755 --> 00:23:46,799
and also to see if there are
any hits, if you will,
543
00:23:46,800 --> 00:23:48,801
in the associated anomalies
within.
544
00:23:48,802 --> 00:23:50,720
Steve, what's your swath like?
545
00:23:50,721 --> 00:23:52,347
Like, are you going
You're probably
546
00:23:52,348 --> 00:23:53,640
You're a meter wide
547
00:23:53,641 --> 00:23:55,350
‐and you're swathing out, right?
‐Yeah.
548
00:23:55,351 --> 00:23:56,392
At‐at what angle?
549
00:23:56,393 --> 00:23:58,102
Uh, 30 degrees.
550
00:23:58,103 --> 00:23:59,520
That's not bad.
That's good coverage.
551
00:23:59,521 --> 00:24:00,564
Yeah.
552
00:24:02,942 --> 00:24:04,525
Just hold on!
553
00:24:04,526 --> 00:24:06,236
I'm gonna get rid
of the other rope!
554
00:24:09,448 --> 00:24:11,784
Okay! Go!
555
00:24:18,874 --> 00:24:21,542
Going over a bunch of stuff now.
556
00:24:21,543 --> 00:24:22,627
Okay, just...
557
00:24:22,628 --> 00:24:24,337
went over something there.
558
00:24:24,338 --> 00:24:27,257
Just went over an anomaly!
559
00:24:29,176 --> 00:24:30,593
How deep?
560
00:24:30,594 --> 00:24:32,845
About three meters!
561
00:24:32,846 --> 00:24:35,056
‐How big?
‐Uh...
562
00:24:35,057 --> 00:24:36,891
six meters.
563
00:24:36,892 --> 00:24:38,101
Six meters!
564
00:24:38,102 --> 00:24:39,477
Six meters wide? Across?
565
00:24:39,478 --> 00:24:41,813
‐Across.
‐Okay.
566
00:24:41,814 --> 00:24:45,483
An anomaly some ten feet
beneath the swamp
567
00:24:45,484 --> 00:24:47,318
measuring 20 feet wide
568
00:24:47,319 --> 00:24:49,654
and found near one
of the locations identified
569
00:24:49,655 --> 00:24:51,572
by Corjan Mol?
570
00:24:51,573 --> 00:24:54,534
Could it be connected to
the large ship‐shaped anomaly
571
00:24:54,535 --> 00:24:58,371
that was discovered
by seismic scanning last year?
572
00:24:58,372 --> 00:25:03,167
This GPR is showing a‐an anomaly
that's quite substantial,
573
00:25:03,168 --> 00:25:07,880
and I do want us to pursue it
as aggressively as possible.
574
00:25:07,881 --> 00:25:09,799
So we're in the process
of trying
575
00:25:09,800 --> 00:25:13,761
to acquire permits
to allow such a dig to occur
576
00:25:13,762 --> 00:25:17,223
and understand if indeed
the swamp held secrets.
577
00:25:17,224 --> 00:25:20,059
That's probably our anomaly!
578
00:25:20,060 --> 00:25:21,561
Yep. That's interesting.
579
00:25:21,562 --> 00:25:24,355
Where you are,
the dimension of it.
580
00:25:24,356 --> 00:25:26,816
It could be significant.
Let's put it that way.
581
00:25:26,817 --> 00:25:29,027
So, here's what I think
we should do.
582
00:25:29,028 --> 00:25:30,820
Do a couple more runs here
and then go north‐south
583
00:25:30,821 --> 00:25:32,865
‐through that area.
‐Okeydoke.
584
00:25:35,576 --> 00:25:39,620
As GPR continues
in the swamp...
585
00:25:39,621 --> 00:25:41,789
You guys call for some more guys
with shovels?
586
00:25:41,790 --> 00:25:43,249
Only if you're willing
to get your hands dirty.
587
00:25:43,250 --> 00:25:44,917
Yeah.
588
00:25:44,918 --> 00:25:46,461
...Alex Lagina joins
589
00:25:46,462 --> 00:25:49,088
other members of the team
at Smith's Cove
590
00:25:49,089 --> 00:25:50,548
as they continue searching
591
00:25:50,549 --> 00:25:53,217
inside the mysterious
log structure
592
00:25:53,218 --> 00:25:54,927
in hopes of finding
possible evidence
593
00:25:54,928 --> 00:25:57,472
of the legendary
flood tunnel system.
594
00:25:57,473 --> 00:25:59,140
What's going on?
595
00:25:59,141 --> 00:26:01,768
We're trying to find
the stone drains.
596
00:26:01,769 --> 00:26:04,062
So, we're digging very carefully
to see if we can find the trace
597
00:26:04,063 --> 00:26:07,023
that the drain is hiding
somewhere within this pile.
598
00:26:07,024 --> 00:26:08,775
‐So...
‐ So, on the theory
599
00:26:08,776 --> 00:26:10,735
that this was put down
to try to...
600
00:26:10,736 --> 00:26:12,945
intersect
and shut off the drain,
601
00:26:12,946 --> 00:26:14,489
we're looking in here
and out there?
602
00:26:14,490 --> 00:26:15,823
‐ Yes.
‐Yep.
603
00:26:15,824 --> 00:26:17,366
This, hopefully,
will tell us two things.
604
00:26:17,367 --> 00:26:19,160
Maybe it'll show us
what they were looking at,
605
00:26:19,161 --> 00:26:20,870
or maybe it'll show us
the‐the level
606
00:26:20,871 --> 00:26:22,830
that they were trying to reach
to examine something.
607
00:26:22,831 --> 00:26:24,457
Got it.
608
00:26:24,458 --> 00:26:27,126
When we first revealed
the amount
609
00:26:27,127 --> 00:26:29,295
of rock that was in the front
610
00:26:29,296 --> 00:26:31,672
of the box‐like structures,
the first thought
611
00:26:31,673 --> 00:26:33,966
on everyone's mind was is it
612
00:26:33,967 --> 00:26:36,302
some association
with the flooding system?
613
00:26:36,303 --> 00:26:38,513
We don't know as of yet,
but we need
614
00:26:38,514 --> 00:26:40,264
to continue to expose
the structure.
615
00:26:40,265 --> 00:26:43,559
Because if you can prove
that the, uh,
616
00:26:43,560 --> 00:26:45,436
old stories,
617
00:26:45,437 --> 00:26:48,439
the‐the old reports
are accurate
618
00:26:48,440 --> 00:26:51,234
there is a flood tunnel,
there is a box drain
619
00:26:51,235 --> 00:26:52,610
that's huge.
620
00:26:52,611 --> 00:26:55,530
Oh, look at that.
621
00:26:55,531 --> 00:26:57,616
That's about three feet down.
622
00:26:58,617 --> 00:27:00,827
Wow.
623
00:27:00,828 --> 00:27:01,994
I wonder if that's part
of a platform.
624
00:27:01,995 --> 00:27:03,412
‐Yeah.
‐Mm‐hmm.
625
00:27:03,413 --> 00:27:05,790
‐Yeah. ‐Yeah, looks like
a pretty thick beam.
626
00:27:05,791 --> 00:27:08,835
I can reach all in
through there.
627
00:27:08,836 --> 00:27:10,336
A platform?
628
00:27:10,337 --> 00:27:12,505
Could the shaft‐like
wooden structure,
629
00:27:12,506 --> 00:27:14,006
possibly connected
630
00:27:14,007 --> 00:27:16,384
to the island's
legendary flooding system,
631
00:27:16,385 --> 00:27:18,553
be covering
a much deeper structure
632
00:27:18,554 --> 00:27:20,805
than the team
previously thought?
633
00:27:20,806 --> 00:27:24,767
If so,
how far down does it go?
634
00:27:24,768 --> 00:27:27,937
And what could be lying
at the bottom?
635
00:27:27,938 --> 00:27:29,730
Hey, Rick.
636
00:27:29,731 --> 00:27:30,691
Hey.
637
00:27:34,027 --> 00:27:35,278
That's the end of it?
638
00:27:35,279 --> 00:27:37,822
No, this is a
this is like a platform.
639
00:27:37,823 --> 00:27:39,824
We took another board out.
640
00:27:39,825 --> 00:27:42,034
It would have been
over top of this.
641
00:27:42,035 --> 00:27:44,203
If that's a platform,
they went deep.
642
00:27:44,204 --> 00:27:46,581
What was the purpose
of the platform?
643
00:27:46,582 --> 00:27:49,292
Well, in general, it was because
you had ladderways, right?
644
00:27:49,293 --> 00:27:50,877
So, if it was a deeper shaft,
645
00:27:50,878 --> 00:27:52,628
you come down to a platform
646
00:27:52,629 --> 00:27:54,839
and then the next ladder segment
would take you down deeper.
647
00:27:54,840 --> 00:27:56,090
You set the ladder that way
and that way
648
00:27:56,091 --> 00:27:57,758
‐kind of thing.
‐Yeah. You got to wonder
649
00:27:57,759 --> 00:27:59,886
how deep this goes
if they put a platform into it.
650
00:27:59,887 --> 00:28:02,430
The whole point
of this bump out
651
00:28:02,431 --> 00:28:04,223
in Smith's Cove
was to find things.
652
00:28:04,224 --> 00:28:06,225
Well,
we certainly have done that.
653
00:28:06,226 --> 00:28:11,022
There appears to be a working
platform we found in the box,
654
00:28:11,023 --> 00:28:13,691
and, of course, we don't know
how deep the structure is.
655
00:28:13,692 --> 00:28:15,902
But might they be
critically important
656
00:28:15,903 --> 00:28:18,529
in terms
of the discovery process
657
00:28:18,530 --> 00:28:21,282
as it applies
to the ongoing search agenda?
658
00:28:21,283 --> 00:28:22,450
Absolutely.
659
00:28:22,451 --> 00:28:24,160
So, I very much look forward
660
00:28:24,161 --> 00:28:27,038
not so much to the days
that have come before
661
00:28:27,039 --> 00:28:28,623
but the days
as we move forward.
662
00:28:28,624 --> 00:28:30,291
The only problem is
663
00:28:30,292 --> 00:28:33,336
this footprint keeps getting
wider and wider and wider.
664
00:28:33,337 --> 00:28:37,632
Then we compromise our ability
to dig as we excavate.
665
00:28:37,633 --> 00:28:39,300
I'll ask you, Laird.
666
00:28:39,301 --> 00:28:42,595
Is there an importance for you
to dig this shaft?
667
00:28:42,596 --> 00:28:44,513
Or should
we just leave well enough alone?
668
00:28:44,514 --> 00:28:47,558
‐Yeah. ‐And then,
as this dig proceeds this way,
669
00:28:47,559 --> 00:28:49,143
then, in conjunction
with the dig,
670
00:28:49,144 --> 00:28:50,645
‐we excavate the shaft?
‐Yeah. I don't think
671
00:28:50,646 --> 00:28:52,647
there's an urgent need
to do this,
672
00:28:52,648 --> 00:28:55,149
‐to be honest.
‐Okay. So we got to stay focused here.
673
00:28:55,150 --> 00:28:57,610
So, as interesting as it is,
674
00:28:57,611 --> 00:29:00,112
we don't want to compromise
the whole area.
675
00:29:00,113 --> 00:29:02,741
We have no idea what might be
here or there or there.
676
00:29:04,576 --> 00:29:06,953
Although Rick Lagina is eager
677
00:29:06,954 --> 00:29:09,163
to continue investigating
the mysterious log
678
00:29:09,164 --> 00:29:11,165
and rock structure,
679
00:29:11,166 --> 00:29:14,502
he is concerned
that fully exposing it
680
00:29:14,503 --> 00:29:17,296
would require digging
a much wider and deeper hole,
681
00:29:17,297 --> 00:29:19,507
one that would restrict
the team's access
682
00:29:19,508 --> 00:29:22,885
to the bump out area.
683
00:29:22,886 --> 00:29:26,180
At this point, I don't want
to get too aggressive.
684
00:29:26,181 --> 00:29:27,848
We don't want to lock ourselves
out of getting
685
00:29:27,849 --> 00:29:30,184
as close
to the sheet pile as possible.
686
00:29:30,185 --> 00:29:34,146
So, the idea is to go dig
from north to south
687
00:29:34,147 --> 00:29:38,651
and hopefully uncover something
that will tell us
688
00:29:38,652 --> 00:29:40,653
what these structures
may or may not mean.
689
00:29:40,654 --> 00:29:43,406
That's the hope.
We have to stay the course.
690
00:29:43,407 --> 00:29:45,866
I think the best thing to do is
691
00:29:45,867 --> 00:29:49,245
to start digging over there
and‐and dig this way.
692
00:29:49,246 --> 00:29:52,039
Once we get to here, then we can
693
00:29:52,040 --> 00:29:54,959
have a proper plan to do this
694
00:29:54,960 --> 00:29:57,503
with archeological precision
and with
695
00:29:57,504 --> 00:29:59,755
‐paramount safety in mind.
‐Yeah.
696
00:29:59,756 --> 00:30:01,257
I'm sold. Let's do it.
697
00:30:01,258 --> 00:30:07,013
Yeah.
698
00:30:07,014 --> 00:30:08,305
One day
after the Oak Island team
699
00:30:08,306 --> 00:30:11,100
halted their search efforts
at Smith's Cove,
700
00:30:11,101 --> 00:30:14,979
Jack Begley, Dave Blankenship,
historian Doug Crowell
701
00:30:14,980 --> 00:30:19,483
and geologist Terry Matheson
have resumed the team's
702
00:30:19,484 --> 00:30:22,319
core drilling operations
in the Money Pit area.
703
00:30:22,320 --> 00:30:24,488
Having recently found
a 19th‐century
704
00:30:24,489 --> 00:30:26,824
searcher shaft,
known as Shaft Nine,
705
00:30:26,825 --> 00:30:31,037
they are using its location,
along with archival maps,
706
00:30:31,038 --> 00:30:33,539
in an effort
to find Shaft Two.
707
00:30:33,540 --> 00:30:36,792
This was the searcher shaft dug
by Daniel McGinnis
708
00:30:36,793 --> 00:30:39,336
and his partners in 1805,
709
00:30:39,337 --> 00:30:42,465
while they were looking for
a back door into the Money Pit
710
00:30:42,466 --> 00:30:45,301
that would allow them
to avoid the flood tunnels.
711
00:30:45,302 --> 00:30:49,096
If they can find Shaft Two,
the team hopes
712
00:30:49,097 --> 00:30:51,974
to finally pinpoint the precise
location of the Money Pit,
713
00:30:51,975 --> 00:30:55,770
which has been lost
for more than half a century.
714
00:30:55,771 --> 00:30:58,397
Shaft Two is really important,
'cause it's the first
715
00:30:58,398 --> 00:31:00,524
‐searcher shaft that we know of.
‐SCOTT: Last night,
716
00:31:00,525 --> 00:31:03,194
we come up with three possible,
uh, layouts of the shaft.
717
00:31:03,195 --> 00:31:05,237
‐Yup.
‐ That's the whole idea.
718
00:31:05,238 --> 00:31:07,990
We're trying to dial in
its exact location.
719
00:31:07,991 --> 00:31:09,617
And we're gonna use
this information
720
00:31:09,618 --> 00:31:12,161
to figure out where
the Money Pit should be.
721
00:31:12,162 --> 00:31:14,580
‐It's gonna direct us
one way or the other. ‐Yeah.
722
00:31:14,581 --> 00:31:17,374
Look at all the wood.
‐ Oh! Look at the wood!
723
00:31:17,375 --> 00:31:20,002
‐So we're definitely on a shaft.
This is the edge of it. ‐Yeah.
724
00:31:20,003 --> 00:31:21,879
One week ago,
725
00:31:21,880 --> 00:31:24,757
Craig Tester and members
of the team drilled
726
00:31:24,758 --> 00:31:27,676
into a wooden structure
some 33 feet deep,
727
00:31:27,677 --> 00:31:30,179
while looking for the shaft.
728
00:31:30,180 --> 00:31:33,182
Eager to confirm
that they have indeed found
729
00:31:33,183 --> 00:31:36,060
the 200‐year‐old
searcher tunnel, the team
730
00:31:36,061 --> 00:31:39,939
has begun drilling a number
of exploratory boreholes.
731
00:31:39,940 --> 00:31:43,442
All right. We got
some good stuff here, guys.
732
00:31:43,443 --> 00:31:45,277
Time to get dirty.
733
00:31:45,278 --> 00:31:48,364
‐ What's our depth?
19 to 29.
734
00:31:48,365 --> 00:31:51,201
I think this is gonna answer
some questions.
735
00:31:53,745 --> 00:31:57,581
Hey. People, this is great.
736
00:31:57,582 --> 00:31:59,250
Oh, that's a lot of wood!
737
00:31:59,251 --> 00:32:00,918
This is really good.
738
00:32:00,919 --> 00:32:03,045
We got a nice section
of wood here.
739
00:32:03,046 --> 00:32:05,923
Wow. Oh, my.
740
00:32:05,924 --> 00:32:09,344
And some square edges.
741
00:32:10,554 --> 00:32:12,263
Oh, no way!
742
00:32:12,264 --> 00:32:13,764
Look at that.
There's a cut end.
743
00:32:13,765 --> 00:32:15,933
Look at that!
744
00:32:15,934 --> 00:32:17,726
So, we might be hitting
the corner of something?
745
00:32:17,727 --> 00:32:19,770
That's a box joint right there!
746
00:32:19,771 --> 00:32:22,231
Look at that flat there,
flat surface.
747
00:32:22,232 --> 00:32:24,066
Yeah!
‐ We're on a corner,
748
00:32:24,067 --> 00:32:26,569
‐I think, gentlemen.
‐Yeah.
749
00:32:26,570 --> 00:32:28,445
That's gonna really help
with our configurations.
750
00:32:28,446 --> 00:32:31,615
If this is the corner
of the shaft, then
751
00:32:31,616 --> 00:32:33,450
we should be able
to adjust all our data.
752
00:32:33,451 --> 00:32:35,411
Oh, yeah.
753
00:32:35,412 --> 00:32:37,037
Finding one
of the suspected corners
754
00:32:37,038 --> 00:32:40,040
of Shaft Two is
an exciting development.
755
00:32:40,041 --> 00:32:43,919
However, the team will need
to find at least one more wall
756
00:32:43,920 --> 00:32:45,838
in order
to pinpoint the location
757
00:32:45,839 --> 00:32:47,590
of the connecting tunnel
believed
758
00:32:47,591 --> 00:32:49,925
to lead to the Money Pit.
759
00:32:49,926 --> 00:32:52,428
Now that we have two
different points of the shaft,
760
00:32:52,429 --> 00:32:55,055
it gives us a good idea
of where we need to go to locate
761
00:32:55,056 --> 00:32:58,767
the other sides, but it's
looking like we're starting to
762
00:32:58,768 --> 00:33:01,562
get a really good idea of where
this tunnel used to be,
763
00:33:01,563 --> 00:33:03,647
and where the Money Pit
764
00:33:03,648 --> 00:33:05,316
hopefully still is.
765
00:33:05,317 --> 00:33:07,985
‐Hey, Rick.
‐Hey.
766
00:33:07,986 --> 00:33:11,322
Great timing.
We tagged into the shaft again.
767
00:33:11,323 --> 00:33:14,992
Okay. Explain where we are,
what, how deep.
768
00:33:14,993 --> 00:33:16,785
So, we've got
a good solid intersection,
769
00:33:16,786 --> 00:33:18,996
whether it's on a corner
or whether it's the wall
770
00:33:18,997 --> 00:33:21,165
from 24 feet to 29 feet.
771
00:33:21,166 --> 00:33:23,000
We're so close.
We're really dialing in
772
00:33:23,001 --> 00:33:24,960
the orientation of the shaft.
773
00:33:24,961 --> 00:33:28,172
But to go back to this then,
774
00:33:28,173 --> 00:33:29,840
we're still not...
775
00:33:29,841 --> 00:33:32,468
We can't be confident
of the orientation
776
00:33:32,469 --> 00:33:34,303
‐even with that. ‐100%.
There's too many variables.
777
00:33:34,304 --> 00:33:37,014
So, it's an easy call.
Keep drilling.
778
00:33:37,015 --> 00:33:38,766
As long as needs be...
779
00:33:38,767 --> 00:33:40,351
‐Yup.
‐...to come away
780
00:33:40,352 --> 00:33:43,062
with high confidence
of the orientation of that.
781
00:33:43,063 --> 00:33:45,022
‐ Absolutely.
‐ Because this is
782
00:33:45,023 --> 00:33:47,274
absolutely necessary
to put "X" on the ground here.
783
00:33:47,275 --> 00:33:50,402
And then we do whatever it takes
to find that tunnel,
784
00:33:50,403 --> 00:33:53,197
and we drill it.
785
00:33:53,198 --> 00:33:55,199
Good. Looking forward to it.
‐ Super.
786
00:33:55,200 --> 00:33:57,159
If this is the shaft, it's
787
00:33:57,160 --> 00:33:59,119
the point of beginning,
as all surveyors need.
788
00:33:59,120 --> 00:34:00,704
You need a POB.
789
00:34:00,705 --> 00:34:03,207
We know the shaft was
14 feet away
790
00:34:03,208 --> 00:34:05,167
from the original Money Pit,
791
00:34:05,168 --> 00:34:07,544
but now, the critical missing
piece of information is,
792
00:34:07,545 --> 00:34:09,129
what is the orientation?
793
00:34:09,130 --> 00:34:12,675
Because it will go
a long way towards
794
00:34:12,676 --> 00:34:14,009
pinpointing the Money Pit.
795
00:34:14,010 --> 00:34:15,386
I wish everybody good luck,
796
00:34:15,387 --> 00:34:17,221
but I'm going to go down there,
and I hope to...
797
00:34:17,222 --> 00:34:18,889
I hope to find something
to show you guys.
798
00:34:18,890 --> 00:34:20,891
‐Good luck!
Thanks, Rick.
799
00:34:20,892 --> 00:34:21,935
‐ See you later, Rick.
Thanks. You, too, Rick.
800
00:34:25,146 --> 00:34:26,730
Everybody hold their breath.
801
00:34:26,731 --> 00:34:28,691
This is getting so exciting.
802
00:34:28,692 --> 00:34:30,651
After finding what they believe
803
00:34:30,652 --> 00:34:33,737
to be one of the four corners
of Shaft Two...
804
00:34:33,738 --> 00:34:36,115
Incoming sausage!
805
00:34:36,116 --> 00:34:38,117
...members
of the Oak Island team
806
00:34:38,118 --> 00:34:40,286
have begun drilling
a new exploratory borehole
807
00:34:40,287 --> 00:34:45,374
in an attempt to locate
another wall of the structure.
808
00:34:45,375 --> 00:34:46,917
I don't see any wood
right there,
809
00:34:46,918 --> 00:34:48,920
but let's‐let's have
a better look.
810
00:34:51,881 --> 00:34:55,759
Let's‐let's see what we got.
811
00:34:55,760 --> 00:34:57,428
‐You just got shards there.
‐Yeah.
812
00:34:57,429 --> 00:34:59,264
Yeah. Oh!
813
00:35:00,849 --> 00:35:02,683
‐Whoa! Hello.
‐Oh.
814
00:35:02,684 --> 00:35:06,854
Okay. Hold the phone. Wow.
815
00:35:06,855 --> 00:35:09,023
Oh, yeah!
There we go! ‐Okay.
816
00:35:09,024 --> 00:35:11,108
That looks like we got
something interesting there.
817
00:35:11,109 --> 00:35:12,776
Oh, lots of wood.
818
00:35:12,777 --> 00:35:14,528
‐This is good.
‐Yeah.
819
00:35:14,529 --> 00:35:16,655
This could be the day.
820
00:35:16,656 --> 00:35:19,325
That's a fairly
substantial plank.
821
00:35:19,326 --> 00:35:22,036
We are right up
against the wall here.
822
00:35:22,037 --> 00:35:24,038
‐So this is our third time.
‐ Yup.
823
00:35:24,039 --> 00:35:26,624
We got three points now.
That can't be just one wall.
824
00:35:26,625 --> 00:35:28,375
‐Yeah.
‐ So we've got two walls.
825
00:35:28,376 --> 00:35:30,628
‐Yeah. ‐ This is great news,
gentlemen.
826
00:35:30,629 --> 00:35:32,421
Because Shaft Two
827
00:35:32,422 --> 00:35:34,715
is the oldest‐known
searcher site on the island,
828
00:35:34,716 --> 00:35:36,425
and the one closest
829
00:35:36,426 --> 00:35:38,385
to the original Money Pit,
finding evidence
830
00:35:38,386 --> 00:35:40,888
of what appears
to be the shaft's second wall
831
00:35:40,889 --> 00:35:42,973
is an exciting development.
832
00:35:42,974 --> 00:35:45,976
If they can verify
their discovery,
833
00:35:45,977 --> 00:35:48,312
and then locate a tunnel
running off of it
834
00:35:48,313 --> 00:35:50,522
at a depth of 110 feet,
835
00:35:50,523 --> 00:35:53,108
the team could lock in
an exact location
836
00:35:53,109 --> 00:35:55,027
for the fabled Money Pit,
837
00:35:55,028 --> 00:35:58,072
and, hopefully,
the Oak Island treasure.
838
00:35:58,073 --> 00:36:02,409
We're now chasing a tunnel
from Shaft Two.
839
00:36:02,410 --> 00:36:04,828
The best thing of all of this,
it's pointing to an area
840
00:36:04,829 --> 00:36:07,915
that's never been searched,
so it's all virgin ground.
841
00:36:07,916 --> 00:36:11,210
So, I think this becomes our
most important search to date.
842
00:36:11,211 --> 00:36:12,836
It's looking really promising.
843
00:36:12,837 --> 00:36:17,091
That makes me want to collect
dendro from this shaft.
844
00:36:17,092 --> 00:36:19,843
‐Yup.
‐In order to confirm
845
00:36:19,844 --> 00:36:21,887
that the wooden structure
they discovered
846
00:36:21,888 --> 00:36:25,516
is, in fact, Shaft Two,
the Oak Island team will need
847
00:36:25,517 --> 00:36:27,393
to submit wood samples taken
from the site
848
00:36:27,394 --> 00:36:29,520
for dendrochronology testing.
849
00:36:29,521 --> 00:36:33,190
Also known
as "tree‐ring dating,"
850
00:36:33,191 --> 00:36:35,693
dendrochronology is
a scientific method
851
00:36:35,694 --> 00:36:39,029
used to study the size
and pattern of growth rings,
852
00:36:39,030 --> 00:36:42,866
which develop as a tree grows
over its lifetime.
853
00:36:42,867 --> 00:36:45,244
The process can accurately
determine
854
00:36:45,245 --> 00:36:48,247
not only the age of wood,
but when it was cut
855
00:36:48,248 --> 00:36:50,499
for use in construction.
856
00:36:50,500 --> 00:36:53,043
The tool that seems
to have worked the best
857
00:36:53,044 --> 00:36:55,462
on the island really, as far
as precision and accuracy,
858
00:36:55,463 --> 00:36:57,047
is dendrochronology.
859
00:36:57,048 --> 00:36:59,383
So, now we have several
different samples,
860
00:36:59,384 --> 00:37:00,759
and we need to test it.
861
00:37:00,760 --> 00:37:02,386
And if it comes
862
00:37:02,387 --> 00:37:04,430
back in a very narrow window,
863
00:37:04,431 --> 00:37:06,765
this is
when the trees were used,
864
00:37:06,766 --> 00:37:09,059
if it lines up
with that information, then
865
00:37:09,060 --> 00:37:13,147
we know definitively
we've located Shaft Two.
866
00:37:13,148 --> 00:37:14,690
We've got to pin the next hole.
867
00:37:14,691 --> 00:37:15,983
So we're‐we're gonna move off
of this shaft.
868
00:37:15,984 --> 00:37:17,609
We're gonna chase the tunnel.
869
00:37:17,610 --> 00:37:20,529
Doug and I are gonna take off
to the Research Center.
870
00:37:20,530 --> 00:37:22,906
‐I'm gonna put this data
into our 3‐D model. ‐Yeah.
871
00:37:22,907 --> 00:37:24,366
I'll come back
and supply you guys with that.
872
00:37:24,367 --> 00:37:25,951
So the quest for Shaft Two
873
00:37:25,952 --> 00:37:27,327
continues
for at least one more hole.
874
00:37:27,328 --> 00:37:29,413
‐That's right.
‐At least. Yeah. ‐Yeah.
875
00:37:29,414 --> 00:37:31,415
If we're lucky enough
to go into a tunnel, we might
876
00:37:31,416 --> 00:37:33,959
just chase the tunnel as far
as we can, actually, so...
877
00:37:33,960 --> 00:37:35,753
‐Oh, yeah!
‐That's the plan.
878
00:37:35,754 --> 00:37:38,172
‐Yup. ‐All right, we're gonna go
pin the next hole.
879
00:37:38,173 --> 00:37:44,011
Super. Thanks a lot.
880
00:37:44,012 --> 00:37:45,721
‐ Hey, Craig.
Craig!
881
00:37:45,722 --> 00:37:47,055
‐Hey, Craig.
‐Hey, guys. ‐ Hey.
882
00:37:47,056 --> 00:37:49,183
One week after sending
883
00:37:49,184 --> 00:37:51,685
wood samples collected
at the Money Pit area
884
00:37:51,686 --> 00:37:54,146
off for scientific testing,
Rick,
885
00:37:54,147 --> 00:37:56,899
Marty and members of the team
gather in the war room.
886
00:37:56,900 --> 00:37:59,359
They are eager to hear a report
887
00:37:59,360 --> 00:38:03,155
on the structure they hope
can be verified as Shaft Two.
888
00:38:03,156 --> 00:38:06,241
Guys, my favorite kind of
war room is about to commence.
889
00:38:06,242 --> 00:38:08,994
And‐and this is a favorite
of a favorite because
890
00:38:08,995 --> 00:38:10,913
what has worked best for us
891
00:38:10,914 --> 00:38:14,792
as analysis tools has been
dendrochronology on, uh,
892
00:38:14,793 --> 00:38:16,502
the logs, and we got a bunch
of results coming in.
893
00:38:16,503 --> 00:38:20,756
‐All right!
‐Got good info for us?
894
00:38:20,757 --> 00:38:22,633
I've got the data
from Colin Laroque
895
00:38:22,634 --> 00:38:25,344
for the dendro
from the Money Pit area.
896
00:38:25,345 --> 00:38:27,137
It was from, uh,
897
00:38:27,138 --> 00:38:31,475
98.5 to 103.5 feet deep.
898
00:38:31,476 --> 00:38:33,060
‐Yup.
‐Um,
899
00:38:33,061 --> 00:38:36,772
but the age he's coming up with
is 1796.
900
00:38:36,773 --> 00:38:38,357
‐ Wow.
‐That's good.
901
00:38:38,358 --> 00:38:40,359
Yup. So,
902
00:38:40,360 --> 00:38:43,237
in 1805 was the year
Shaft Two was put in.
903
00:38:43,238 --> 00:38:45,364
So it fits great.
904
00:38:45,365 --> 00:38:46,865
So we're in the right spot!
905
00:38:46,866 --> 00:38:48,367
‐Success.
906
00:38:48,368 --> 00:38:51,203
The results
of the test indicate that
907
00:38:51,204 --> 00:38:52,955
the wooden structure
the team has unearthed
908
00:38:52,956 --> 00:38:56,542
at the Money Pit site
is most likely Shaft Two.
909
00:38:56,543 --> 00:38:59,628
They should now be able
to pinpoint the exact location
910
00:38:59,629 --> 00:39:02,297
of the mysterious Money Pit
treasure shaft
911
00:39:02,298 --> 00:39:04,132
first discovered
by Daniel McGinnis
912
00:39:04,133 --> 00:39:07,220
and his friends in 1795.
913
00:39:08,763 --> 00:39:09,930
That's perfect, don't you think?
914
00:39:09,931 --> 00:39:11,431
Yeah, it's perfect.
915
00:39:11,432 --> 00:39:12,808
No, that's great.
That's your there's your
916
00:39:12,809 --> 00:39:13,892
‐There's your test.
‐There's my test.
917
00:39:13,893 --> 00:39:15,853
Yeah. Look, that's stunning.
918
00:39:15,854 --> 00:39:17,479
I‐I'll be honest.
919
00:39:17,480 --> 00:39:19,356
I'm a bit
What is it, Gary?
920
00:39:19,357 --> 00:39:21,692
‐Gobsmacked?
‐Yeah, gobsmacked.
921
00:39:21,693 --> 00:39:23,110
Yeah.
922
00:39:23,111 --> 00:39:24,403
You couldn't get
better results than that.
923
00:39:24,404 --> 00:39:25,737
‐Once again...
‐It's a good thing.
924
00:39:25,738 --> 00:39:26,864
‐...a right‐on number.
‐Very good.
925
00:39:26,865 --> 00:39:28,031
That's fabulous.
926
00:39:28,032 --> 00:39:29,992
‐Yes.
‐Fantastic information.
927
00:39:29,993 --> 00:39:31,743
That's great.
928
00:39:31,744 --> 00:39:33,078
I'll tell you what's refreshing.
929
00:39:33,079 --> 00:39:34,997
How many times have we
sat around this table
930
00:39:34,998 --> 00:39:37,541
and some data comes in, says,
"Well, could be, might be"?
931
00:39:37,542 --> 00:39:40,377
I think we found Shaft Two,
which means we...
932
00:39:40,378 --> 00:39:43,380
we are very close
to the original Money Pit.
933
00:39:43,381 --> 00:39:44,756
Yep.
934
00:39:44,757 --> 00:39:46,383
And now we're talking about
the Money Pit's
935
00:39:46,384 --> 00:39:48,886
right in this small area.
936
00:39:48,887 --> 00:39:52,014
‐Yeah. ‐14 feet away from
known points.
937
00:39:52,015 --> 00:39:53,432
Yeah.
938
00:39:53,433 --> 00:39:56,101
1796. What it does is
eliminate that shaft
939
00:39:56,102 --> 00:39:57,978
from being anything
but Shaft Two.
940
00:39:57,979 --> 00:39:59,354
I totally agree.
941
00:39:59,355 --> 00:40:01,189
'Cause nothing's anywhere
near that old,
942
00:40:01,190 --> 00:40:03,442
except that and
the Money Pit itself.
943
00:40:03,443 --> 00:40:06,194
I think the Money Pit has
to be somewhere in about
944
00:40:06,195 --> 00:40:09,364
a 20‐foot radius,
maybe even a little less.
945
00:40:09,365 --> 00:40:13,702
I think we're close to
the original workings.
946
00:40:13,703 --> 00:40:15,871
More so than at any other time.
947
00:40:15,872 --> 00:40:19,291
If you accept Shaft Two
and 14 feet as valid
948
00:40:19,292 --> 00:40:22,336
and I think Shaft Two
just became completely valid
949
00:40:22,337 --> 00:40:24,922
it's the 14 feet
we're dealing with now.
950
00:40:24,923 --> 00:40:28,425
The 14‐foot arc is, I mean,
that's‐that's zeroing in.
951
00:40:28,426 --> 00:40:30,010
You know what the big
takeaway today is?
952
00:40:30,011 --> 00:40:32,804
That the Money Pit
may no longer be lost.
953
00:40:32,805 --> 00:40:34,932
‐Yes.
‐Hear, hear!
954
00:40:34,933 --> 00:40:37,935
We're in the right time frame.
Late 1700s.
955
00:40:37,936 --> 00:40:39,978
And we all believe
in the dendro.
956
00:40:39,979 --> 00:40:42,022
‐Yeah.
‐ We're not done yet.
957
00:40:42,023 --> 00:40:44,232
I'm really encouraged by it.
This is great news,
958
00:40:44,233 --> 00:40:46,568
and we need to go
capitalize on it.
959
00:40:46,569 --> 00:40:48,445
So, let's go do that.
960
00:40:48,446 --> 00:40:51,698
For brothers Rick
and Marty Lagina
961
00:40:51,699 --> 00:40:54,326
and the Oak Island team...
962
00:40:54,327 --> 00:40:57,788
locating Shaft Two offers
the promise of a potentially
963
00:40:57,789 --> 00:40:59,122
historic breakthrough.
964
00:40:59,123 --> 00:41:01,541
One that suggests that
965
00:41:01,542 --> 00:41:04,419
the end of their
decades‐long quest
966
00:41:04,420 --> 00:41:06,464
could be just a few weeks away.
967
00:41:07,840 --> 00:41:10,217
But if and when
they finally reach
968
00:41:10,218 --> 00:41:14,554
the fabled treasure shaft,
just what will they find?
969
00:41:14,555 --> 00:41:16,390
An ending to their search?
970
00:41:16,391 --> 00:41:19,935
Or perhaps only another clue...
971
00:41:19,936 --> 00:41:22,312
to solving a mystery that has,
so far,
972
00:41:22,313 --> 00:41:25,273
taken more than
two centuries,
973
00:41:25,274 --> 00:41:27,567
millions of dollars,
974
00:41:27,568 --> 00:41:31,656
and six lives to solve.
975
00:41:34,909 --> 00:41:37,911
Next time on
The Curse of Oak Island...
976
00:41:37,912 --> 00:41:40,247
‐Wow, check that out.
‐Look at that.
977
00:41:40,248 --> 00:41:42,040
‐That's the floor.
‐ We've got a shaft
978
00:41:42,041 --> 00:41:43,709
and we've got a tunnel
coming off it to the west.
979
00:41:43,710 --> 00:41:46,962
Oh, yeah, that is one
heck of a log, isn't it?
980
00:41:46,963 --> 00:41:47,921
That's massive.
981
00:41:47,922 --> 00:41:49,006
Puzzle pieces are
getting bigger,
982
00:41:49,007 --> 00:41:50,507
picture's getting smaller.
983
00:41:50,508 --> 00:41:51,717
If you draw the lines
984
00:41:51,718 --> 00:41:53,176
to find the center,
985
00:41:53,177 --> 00:41:54,511
this is the dead center
of the pentagram.
986
00:41:54,512 --> 00:41:56,179
Right on the eye of the swamp.
987
00:41:56,180 --> 00:41:57,389
The swamp dates
988
00:41:57,390 --> 00:41:59,933
at around 1220 AD.
989
00:41:59,934 --> 00:42:02,060
This is Templar, baby.
990
00:42:03,354 --> 00:42:06,023
Subtitled by Diego Moraes /Ewerton Henrique
www.oakisland.tk
75246
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