All language subtitles for the.curse.of.oak.island.s07e15.720p.web.h264-trump.eztv

af Afrikaans
ak Akan
sq Albanian
am Amharic
ar Arabic
hy Armenian
az Azerbaijani
eu Basque
be Belarusian
bem Bemba
bn Bengali
bh Bihari
bs Bosnian
br Breton
bg Bulgarian
km Cambodian
ca Catalan
ceb Cebuano
chr Cherokee
ny Chichewa
zh-CN Chinese (Simplified)
zh-TW Chinese (Traditional)
co Corsican
hr Croatian
cs Czech
da Danish
nl Dutch
en English
eo Esperanto
et Estonian
ee Ewe
fo Faroese
tl Filipino
fi Finnish
fr French
fy Frisian
gaa Ga
gl Galician
ka Georgian
de German
el Greek
gn Guarani
gu Gujarati
ht Haitian Creole
ha Hausa
haw Hawaiian
iw Hebrew
hi Hindi
hmn Hmong
hu Hungarian
is Icelandic
ig Igbo
id Indonesian
ia Interlingua
ga Irish
it Italian
ja Japanese
jw Javanese
kn Kannada
kk Kazakh
rw Kinyarwanda
rn Kirundi
kg Kongo
ko Korean
kri Krio (Sierra Leone)
ku Kurdish
ckb Kurdish (Soranî)
ky Kyrgyz
lo Laothian
la Latin
lv Latvian
ln Lingala
lt Lithuanian
loz Lozi
lg Luganda
ach Luo
lb Luxembourgish
mk Macedonian
mg Malagasy
ms Malay
ml Malayalam
mt Maltese
mi Maori
mr Marathi
mfe Mauritian Creole
mo Moldavian
mn Mongolian
my Myanmar (Burmese)
sr-ME Montenegrin
ne Nepali
pcm Nigerian Pidgin
nso Northern Sotho
no Norwegian
nn Norwegian (Nynorsk)
oc Occitan
or Oriya
om Oromo
ps Pashto
fa Persian
pl Polish
pt-BR Portuguese (Brazil)
pt Portuguese (Portugal)
pa Punjabi
qu Quechua
ro Romanian
rm Romansh
nyn Runyakitara
ru Russian
sm Samoan
gd Scots Gaelic
sr Serbian
sh Serbo-Croatian
st Sesotho
tn Setswana
crs Seychellois Creole
sn Shona
sd Sindhi
si Sinhalese
sk Slovak
sl Slovenian
so Somali
es Spanish
es-419 Spanish (Latin American)
su Sundanese
sw Swahili
sv Swedish
tg Tajik
ta Tamil
tt Tatar
te Telugu
th Thai
ti Tigrinya
to Tonga
lua Tshiluba
tum Tumbuka
tr Turkish
tk Turkmen
tw Twi
ug Uighur
uk Ukrainian
ur Urdu
uz Uzbek
vi Vietnamese
cy Welsh
wo Wolof
xh Xhosa
yi Yiddish
yo Yoruba
zu Zulu
Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:01,502 --> 00:00:03,544 Tonight, on The Curse of Oak Island... 2 00:00:03,545 --> 00:00:05,338 We've got a target here, Jack. 3 00:00:05,339 --> 00:00:06,923 Oh, look at that. 4 00:00:06,924 --> 00:00:08,758 What the heck is that? 5 00:00:08,759 --> 00:00:10,928 Does it look old to you? 6 00:00:13,639 --> 00:00:16,849 ‐That's what we're looking for in the swamp. ‐Very cool. 7 00:00:16,850 --> 00:00:19,435 What is that, mate? That looks like a tunnel! 8 00:00:19,436 --> 00:00:21,896 There's a massive structure going on here. 9 00:00:21,897 --> 00:00:23,690 What have you found now, Jack? 10 00:00:31,114 --> 00:00:34,742 There is an island in the North Atlantic 11 00:00:34,743 --> 00:00:38,287 where people have been looking for an incredible treasure 12 00:00:38,288 --> 00:00:41,541 for more than 200 years. 13 00:00:41,542 --> 00:00:44,627 So far, they have found a stone slab 14 00:00:44,628 --> 00:00:47,296 with strange symbols carved into it, 15 00:00:47,297 --> 00:00:50,132 mysterious fragments of human bone, 16 00:00:50,133 --> 00:00:53,970 and a lead cross whose origin may stretch back 17 00:00:53,971 --> 00:00:56,472 to the days of the Knights Templar. 18 00:00:56,473 --> 00:01:00,978 To date, six men have died trying to solve the mystery. 19 00:01:02,020 --> 00:01:04,063 And, according to legend, 20 00:01:04,064 --> 00:01:07,233 one more will have to die 21 00:01:07,234 --> 00:01:10,862 before the treasure can be found. 22 00:01:11,586 --> 00:01:15,186 Season 7 - EP 15 Surely Templar www.oakisland.tk 23 00:01:36,096 --> 00:01:38,681 Let's go find this ship! 24 00:01:38,682 --> 00:01:41,434 For brothers Rick and Marty Lagina 25 00:01:41,435 --> 00:01:44,020 and their team, a new day full of hope 26 00:01:44,021 --> 00:01:46,647 and anticipation of a major discovery 27 00:01:46,648 --> 00:01:49,775 is just beginning at the Oak Island swamp. 28 00:01:49,776 --> 00:01:51,610 So here we are. 29 00:01:51,611 --> 00:01:53,612 This is the spot. 30 00:01:53,613 --> 00:01:56,115 ‐We're gonna dig down and trench to 15 feet. ‐Mm‐hmm. 31 00:01:56,116 --> 00:01:57,783 And I'm hoping this would be where 32 00:01:57,784 --> 00:01:59,618 I think a ship anomaly may actually be. 33 00:01:59,619 --> 00:02:03,456 Well, we're about to find out, mate. I hope you're right. 34 00:02:03,457 --> 00:02:06,417 ‐Oh, look. ‐ What is that? 35 00:02:06,418 --> 00:02:09,920 One week ago, while metal detecting in the area 36 00:02:09,921 --> 00:02:13,299 the same area where, earlier this year, 37 00:02:13,300 --> 00:02:15,968 seismic scanning revealed evidence of what appears 38 00:02:15,969 --> 00:02:18,304 to be a ship‐shaped anomaly 39 00:02:18,305 --> 00:02:22,683 Rick Lagina, along with metal detection expert Gary Drayton 40 00:02:22,684 --> 00:02:24,977 and Jack Begley, made what they hope 41 00:02:24,978 --> 00:02:28,397 might be a game‐changing discovery. 42 00:02:28,398 --> 00:02:32,652 Not only did they unearth the remains of an iron strap 43 00:02:32,653 --> 00:02:36,072 one that blacksmithing expert Carmen Legge identified 44 00:02:36,073 --> 00:02:40,243 as possibly coming from an 18th century Spanish galleon. 45 00:02:43,372 --> 00:02:45,915 ‐Wow. ‐They also found evidence 46 00:02:45,916 --> 00:02:49,377 that the strap may have been caught in some sort of fire, 47 00:02:49,378 --> 00:02:53,673 one suggesting that the ship it was on was burned, 48 00:02:53,674 --> 00:02:57,218 and then sunk, somewhere in the area. 49 00:02:57,219 --> 00:02:59,345 A burnt ship in the swamp, Gary? 50 00:02:59,346 --> 00:03:02,014 Yeah, and that's how you hide a ship. You burn it. 51 00:03:02,015 --> 00:03:03,517 Yeah. 52 00:03:15,070 --> 00:03:17,405 This is still 53 00:03:17,406 --> 00:03:20,991 majority unexplored over on the western side of the swamp. 54 00:03:20,992 --> 00:03:24,078 And if we're trenching this whole area, though, 55 00:03:24,079 --> 00:03:26,038 there's a good chance we'll find something. 56 00:03:26,039 --> 00:03:27,623 ‐ Yeah. ‐ Something. 57 00:03:27,624 --> 00:03:29,835 ‐I believe we will. ‐Me, too. 58 00:03:35,257 --> 00:03:37,216 ‐Hey, Rick. ‐Hey. 59 00:03:37,217 --> 00:03:38,801 What does it look like? 60 00:03:38,802 --> 00:03:41,220 Uh, it's pretty hard. 61 00:03:41,221 --> 00:03:45,058 Very dry, too, towards the top, which is not really a surprise. 62 00:03:52,566 --> 00:03:55,734 This is the heart of the anomaly? 63 00:03:55,735 --> 00:03:57,778 Yeah, the top portion of it. 64 00:03:57,779 --> 00:03:59,864 So this is the shallower end then? 65 00:03:59,865 --> 00:04:01,533 Yes. Exactly. 66 00:04:03,785 --> 00:04:07,079 Because the ship‐shaped anomaly 67 00:04:07,080 --> 00:04:09,623 identified by the seismic scan appears 68 00:04:09,624 --> 00:04:13,502 to be buried at an angle with one end some 55 feet deep 69 00:04:13,503 --> 00:04:16,255 and the other only 15 feet deep 70 00:04:16,256 --> 00:04:18,632 the team is hoping to find evidence of it 71 00:04:18,633 --> 00:04:21,094 with their 36‐ton excavator. 72 00:04:32,773 --> 00:04:35,608 Hey. Hey, hey, hey! Look at that! 73 00:04:35,609 --> 00:04:37,944 Right there. 74 00:04:39,571 --> 00:04:41,322 ‐ Right there. ‐ Yeah, I see that. 75 00:04:41,323 --> 00:04:44,241 ‐Can you get it out? ‐ Looks like a wood beam. 76 00:04:44,242 --> 00:04:45,951 I‐I'm not gonna get it now. 77 00:04:45,952 --> 00:04:47,411 We're gonna have to have Billy pull it out. 78 00:04:47,412 --> 00:04:48,789 Yup. 79 00:04:54,628 --> 00:04:56,296 Up. 80 00:05:05,806 --> 00:05:07,640 There you have it. 81 00:05:07,641 --> 00:05:09,643 Assuming I don't fall in the hole. 82 00:05:11,311 --> 00:05:13,438 Do you think that's a survey stake? 83 00:05:15,273 --> 00:05:17,358 ‐It's definitely different, but... ‐Mm‐hmm. 84 00:05:17,359 --> 00:05:19,610 ‐I don't know. ‐A different diameter, 85 00:05:19,611 --> 00:05:21,695 ‐or were the survey stakes...? ‐No, they found they 86 00:05:21,696 --> 00:05:23,656 ‐found them this small. ‐Yeah, they were about that size. 87 00:05:23,657 --> 00:05:25,283 ‐There's‐there's that one picture that we found. ‐Yes. 88 00:05:26,827 --> 00:05:28,244 A wooden stake? 89 00:05:28,245 --> 00:05:29,995 Could it be connected 90 00:05:29,996 --> 00:05:32,414 to the other ancient markers the team has recently 91 00:05:32,415 --> 00:05:34,875 found in the swamp? 92 00:05:34,876 --> 00:05:37,837 All right, we'll keep this. 93 00:05:37,838 --> 00:05:39,797 Good eye, Jack. 94 00:05:39,798 --> 00:05:42,092 I saw the wood. 95 00:05:52,143 --> 00:05:54,854 Hey. While you guys are trenching, 96 00:05:54,855 --> 00:05:56,730 I'm gonna go metal detecting around here. 97 00:05:56,731 --> 00:05:59,692 Okay. And then we will have a better perspective 98 00:05:59,693 --> 00:06:01,694 if we go over there and watch the trench. 99 00:06:01,695 --> 00:06:03,779 ‐Yes. ‐Yeah. ‐ I'll go help him dig. 100 00:06:03,780 --> 00:06:05,281 Okay, mate. See you in a bit. 101 00:06:05,282 --> 00:06:07,867 ‐Good luck. ‐Thanks. 102 00:06:07,868 --> 00:06:09,910 As Rick and the team 103 00:06:09,911 --> 00:06:13,289 continue their investigation in the swamp... 104 00:06:13,290 --> 00:06:16,625 some 1,000 miles west of Oak Island 105 00:06:16,626 --> 00:06:18,627 in Traverse City, Michigan... 106 00:06:18,628 --> 00:06:20,337 ‐Hello, Vanessa! ‐Hey, guys. 107 00:06:20,338 --> 00:06:22,381 ‐How you doing today? ‐ Great. ‐Good. Good. 108 00:06:22,382 --> 00:06:23,883 ...Marty Lagina 109 00:06:23,884 --> 00:06:25,926 and his business partner Craig Tester 110 00:06:25,927 --> 00:06:28,387 have arranged a call with Vanessa Lucido, 111 00:06:28,388 --> 00:06:31,515 the CEO of ROC Equipment, to discuss plans 112 00:06:31,516 --> 00:06:33,893 for what promises to be the largest excavation 113 00:06:33,894 --> 00:06:37,730 the team has ever attempted at the Money Pit. 114 00:06:37,731 --> 00:06:39,440 One thing I'll tell you, Vanessa, 115 00:06:39,441 --> 00:06:42,401 that is kind of exciting actually, it's very exciting 116 00:06:42,402 --> 00:06:44,653 is that Rick and company managed 117 00:06:44,654 --> 00:06:46,739 to find this shaft called "Shaft Two," 118 00:06:46,740 --> 00:06:50,159 and we know from the records, it was only 14 feet away 119 00:06:50,160 --> 00:06:51,869 ‐from the original Money Pit. ‐Okay. 120 00:06:51,870 --> 00:06:54,580 So, we really think we're closing in 121 00:06:54,581 --> 00:06:57,875 on the original Money Pit with that information, 122 00:06:57,876 --> 00:07:00,169 ‐which is exciting. ‐Awesome. 123 00:07:00,170 --> 00:07:02,504 Four weeks ago, 124 00:07:02,505 --> 00:07:04,465 while drilling near Shaft Two‐ 125 00:07:04,466 --> 00:07:07,593 the 1805 searcher tunnel dug by Daniel McGinnis 126 00:07:07,594 --> 00:07:09,762 and members of the Onslow Company 127 00:07:09,763 --> 00:07:11,972 the Oak Island team obtained samples 128 00:07:11,973 --> 00:07:15,142 of unusual, hand‐cut wood. 129 00:07:15,143 --> 00:07:17,603 Wood which was later carbon‐dated 130 00:07:17,604 --> 00:07:19,605 to the 17th century, 131 00:07:19,606 --> 00:07:22,107 more than 100 years before the discovery 132 00:07:22,108 --> 00:07:24,860 of the original Money Pit. 133 00:07:24,861 --> 00:07:27,655 So we want to discuss 134 00:07:27,656 --> 00:07:30,449 what is the largest can, perhaps two, 135 00:07:30,450 --> 00:07:32,576 that we could put down on the island 136 00:07:32,577 --> 00:07:34,495 from a practical standpoint? 137 00:07:34,496 --> 00:07:36,246 So, the last couple years, 138 00:07:36,247 --> 00:07:37,956 we've been putting down five‐foot diameter shafts, 139 00:07:37,957 --> 00:07:40,626 but I do have eight‐foot cans readily available. 140 00:07:40,627 --> 00:07:42,628 Uh, we can do an eight‐footer this year. 141 00:07:42,629 --> 00:07:44,963 ‐Perfect. ‐That'd be great. 142 00:07:44,964 --> 00:07:48,217 And to be safe, I was gonna bring up 220 feet of pipe? 143 00:07:48,218 --> 00:07:49,968 Okay. 144 00:07:49,969 --> 00:07:51,345 We did five‐foot cans 145 00:07:51,346 --> 00:07:53,764 last year and the year before. 146 00:07:53,765 --> 00:07:55,849 And an eight‐foot can doesn't sound 147 00:07:55,850 --> 00:07:57,810 like it's that much bigger, 148 00:07:57,811 --> 00:08:02,106 but we're actually getting two and a half times more material. 149 00:08:02,107 --> 00:08:04,858 Well, that's a lot. It's a lot more sampling. 150 00:08:04,859 --> 00:08:06,652 So, I'm excited about it. 151 00:08:06,653 --> 00:08:08,904 The‐the ability to do this is great. 152 00:08:08,905 --> 00:08:11,573 Are you fairly confident we can get through a shelf 153 00:08:11,574 --> 00:08:14,576 in the bedrock into the cavity below? 154 00:08:14,577 --> 00:08:16,662 We're gonna have a lot better chance because 155 00:08:16,663 --> 00:08:18,163 we're gonna have more of a cutting area. 156 00:08:18,164 --> 00:08:19,581 ‐Okay. ‐So, 157 00:08:19,582 --> 00:08:21,041 um, I think we're gonna have a lot, 158 00:08:21,042 --> 00:08:22,876 ‐lot better chance to get down. ‐Good. 159 00:08:22,877 --> 00:08:25,504 What about the, uh, hammer‐grab? Is it...? 160 00:08:25,505 --> 00:08:27,172 What size do you go with? 161 00:08:27,173 --> 00:08:29,800 So we'll bring eight‐foot grabs. 162 00:08:29,801 --> 00:08:32,010 Bigger boy. We have a big hammer‐grab coming. 163 00:08:32,011 --> 00:08:34,012 Okay. 164 00:08:34,013 --> 00:08:36,515 So, we'll look forward to seeing you there. 165 00:08:36,516 --> 00:08:37,933 ‐Couple weeks? ‐Yeah. 166 00:08:37,934 --> 00:08:39,309 Got a lot of trucks coming your way. 167 00:08:39,310 --> 00:08:40,769 That's great. Get it rolling, 168 00:08:40,770 --> 00:08:42,604 Vanessa. We're ready. It's time to dig. 169 00:08:42,605 --> 00:08:44,398 Yeah. We're‐we're gonna drill shafts all over the island. 170 00:08:44,399 --> 00:08:46,900 ‐All over the place. ‐Okay. ‐We're gonna find it. 171 00:08:46,901 --> 00:08:49,028 ‐Yeah, okay. Good. I love that. 172 00:08:49,029 --> 00:08:50,279 See you in a couple weeks. 173 00:08:50,280 --> 00:08:51,656 All right. Bye, guys. ‐ Bye. 174 00:08:59,873 --> 00:09:02,041 I've never 175 00:09:02,042 --> 00:09:05,044 been back here, Gary, when it's been this dry. 176 00:09:05,045 --> 00:09:06,421 Yeah, it's really dry. 177 00:09:10,300 --> 00:09:12,051 Hey! 178 00:09:12,052 --> 00:09:14,595 We've got a target here, Jack. 179 00:09:14,596 --> 00:09:17,389 ‐Rick! 180 00:09:17,390 --> 00:09:19,475 ‐Come here! ‐ Check this out! 181 00:09:19,476 --> 00:09:22,895 At the Oak Island swamp, Rick Lagina, 182 00:09:22,896 --> 00:09:26,732 his nephew Alex, along with Jack Begley and Gary Drayton 183 00:09:26,733 --> 00:09:29,234 are continuing to search for tangible evidence 184 00:09:29,235 --> 00:09:31,445 that can identify the nature of the strange, 185 00:09:31,446 --> 00:09:34,073 200‐foot‐long, ship‐shaped anomaly 186 00:09:34,074 --> 00:09:37,409 that was revealed by seismic testing earlier this year. 187 00:09:39,746 --> 00:09:41,997 Still in there, so it's down there. 188 00:09:47,170 --> 00:09:49,922 Oh, look at that. What is this doing down here? Look! 189 00:09:49,923 --> 00:09:51,465 What the heck is that? 190 00:09:51,466 --> 00:09:54,384 Oh, look at that. 191 00:09:54,385 --> 00:09:57,847 What the heck... is that? 192 00:10:00,100 --> 00:10:01,767 That looks like... 193 00:10:01,768 --> 00:10:04,728 I don't know what. Some kind of metal point. 194 00:10:04,729 --> 00:10:06,271 Yup. 195 00:10:06,272 --> 00:10:08,357 Some kind of metal post or pin. 196 00:10:08,358 --> 00:10:09,983 Yeah. 197 00:10:09,984 --> 00:10:12,444 There might be wood in there. There might be wood. 198 00:10:12,445 --> 00:10:14,279 Yeah, that's not solid iron. 199 00:10:14,280 --> 00:10:15,781 No. Man, 200 00:10:15,782 --> 00:10:18,075 ‐that is an interesting find. ‐Yeah. 201 00:10:18,076 --> 00:10:22,704 See right here? To me, there's certainly some feature there. 202 00:10:22,705 --> 00:10:24,998 ‐So it's got a fastener. So this was... ‐Oh. 203 00:10:24,999 --> 00:10:26,667 A pole would be in here, right? 204 00:10:26,668 --> 00:10:28,377 And that pin would go through there. 205 00:10:28,378 --> 00:10:30,337 ‐That and that. ‐Yup. 206 00:10:30,338 --> 00:10:33,298 So something was pinned through because something was put in. 207 00:10:33,299 --> 00:10:35,300 Yup. 208 00:10:35,301 --> 00:10:36,760 Initially, it looked like a spear point. 209 00:10:36,761 --> 00:10:39,888 It did. Or a lance point, rather. 210 00:10:39,889 --> 00:10:43,976 But then, we turn it about, and it appears hollow. 211 00:10:43,977 --> 00:10:47,146 And at that point, if this can lead us down a path 212 00:10:47,147 --> 00:10:49,064 towards the ultimate goal of trying 213 00:10:49,065 --> 00:10:51,984 to come to an understanding of what happened on Oak Island, 214 00:10:51,985 --> 00:10:54,319 that's certainly worth investigating. 215 00:10:54,320 --> 00:10:57,364 Gary, I... I have no clue. 216 00:10:57,365 --> 00:11:00,159 Yeah, it is really, really old. 217 00:11:00,160 --> 00:11:01,994 Well, it's got us all stumped. 218 00:11:01,995 --> 00:11:04,329 That is unusual, and... 219 00:11:04,330 --> 00:11:07,416 if you found that, who knows what else is here? 220 00:11:07,417 --> 00:11:08,834 ‐Exactly. ‐Good hunting. 221 00:11:08,835 --> 00:11:10,169 ‐All right, mate. ‐Great find. 222 00:11:10,170 --> 00:11:11,712 ‐Yeah. ‐We're gonna go back 223 00:11:11,713 --> 00:11:13,338 observing that trench. 224 00:11:13,339 --> 00:11:15,007 You guys keep hunting. 225 00:11:15,008 --> 00:11:17,009 All right, let's recheck this hole, Jack. 226 00:11:17,010 --> 00:11:19,511 ‐See if there's anything else here. ‐Oh, yeah, yeah, for sure. 227 00:11:19,512 --> 00:11:23,182 As Jack and Gary continue metal detecting, 228 00:11:23,183 --> 00:11:26,351 Rick and Alex join Paul Troutman, 229 00:11:26,352 --> 00:11:29,688 Dave Blankenship and Billy Gerhardt 230 00:11:29,689 --> 00:11:34,194 as they dig for more evidence of the ship‐shaped anomaly. 231 00:11:39,365 --> 00:11:41,200 I don't like how hard that material is. 232 00:11:41,201 --> 00:11:43,118 No, I didn't hear loose 233 00:11:43,119 --> 00:11:45,704 ‐material in that at all. ‐No, no. 234 00:11:45,705 --> 00:11:48,040 We'd have to have a different bucket 235 00:11:48,041 --> 00:11:50,042 ‐on there to dig deeper. ‐Yes, yes. 236 00:11:50,043 --> 00:11:51,960 You could spend hours digging that, 237 00:11:51,961 --> 00:11:54,214 ‐and beat the equipment up. ‐ Yes. 238 00:12:06,601 --> 00:12:08,227 That's just hard, hard ground. 239 00:12:08,228 --> 00:12:10,437 Yeah, he's just, he's just grinding. 240 00:12:10,438 --> 00:12:11,730 Hey, Billy! 241 00:12:11,731 --> 00:12:12,773 Let's, let's call it. 242 00:12:12,774 --> 00:12:13,899 Let's call it. 243 00:12:13,900 --> 00:12:15,734 You're grinding away. 244 00:12:15,735 --> 00:12:17,569 Although they are only 245 00:12:17,570 --> 00:12:19,071 a few feet away from reaching 246 00:12:19,072 --> 00:12:21,406 their target depth, Rick and the team 247 00:12:21,407 --> 00:12:24,243 have just encountered a frustrating setback. 248 00:12:24,244 --> 00:12:27,412 The densely packed clay bottom of the swamp 249 00:12:27,413 --> 00:12:29,414 is too hard for them to continue digging, 250 00:12:29,415 --> 00:12:33,252 without risking serious damage to their equipment. 251 00:12:33,253 --> 00:12:36,088 But have they encountered a natural barrier, 252 00:12:36,089 --> 00:12:40,133 or one that like the swamp itself, is man‐made? 253 00:12:40,134 --> 00:12:43,470 At the end of the day, this is about expectation management. 254 00:12:43,471 --> 00:12:46,431 And as we speak, I think the preponderance of the evidence 255 00:12:46,432 --> 00:12:49,142 is indicating there's something there. 256 00:12:49,143 --> 00:12:51,937 But we need to take some time and‐and figure this out. 257 00:12:51,938 --> 00:12:53,105 Hope springs eternal. 258 00:12:53,106 --> 00:12:54,691 Hope springs eternal. 259 00:12:57,318 --> 00:12:59,653 After a long day 260 00:12:59,654 --> 00:13:01,989 of investigation in the swamp... 261 00:13:01,990 --> 00:13:04,992 We've invited a guest. 262 00:13:04,993 --> 00:13:07,202 Jim, I welcome you to the war room. 263 00:13:07,203 --> 00:13:08,954 Rick Lagina and other members 264 00:13:08,955 --> 00:13:10,956 of the team gather in the war room 265 00:13:10,957 --> 00:13:13,083 where they are joined once again 266 00:13:13,084 --> 00:13:15,502 by Oak Island theorist, James McQuiston. 267 00:13:15,503 --> 00:13:17,504 I think everyone is familiar with, 268 00:13:17,505 --> 00:13:20,549 you know, your original presentation. 269 00:13:20,550 --> 00:13:22,801 But, we look forward to what you have to tell us today. 270 00:13:22,802 --> 00:13:25,846 I, uh, I have a little handout. 271 00:13:25,847 --> 00:13:27,806 Essentially, what it is, 272 00:13:27,807 --> 00:13:31,643 it's how the Freemasons connect directly to Oak Island. 273 00:13:31,644 --> 00:13:33,145 One year ago, 274 00:13:33,146 --> 00:13:35,355 James presented the team with his research 275 00:13:35,356 --> 00:13:37,649 that suggested Scottish descendants 276 00:13:37,650 --> 00:13:39,151 of the Knights Templar, 277 00:13:39,152 --> 00:13:41,570 known as the order of the Knights Baronet, 278 00:13:41,571 --> 00:13:44,072 not only began settling the region of Nova Scotia 279 00:13:44,073 --> 00:13:46,033 in the early 17th century, 280 00:13:46,034 --> 00:13:49,828 but may have been connected to the Oak Island mystery. 281 00:13:49,829 --> 00:13:54,166 Founded in 1625 by Sir William Alexander, 282 00:13:54,167 --> 00:13:58,170 a Scottish royal advisor to King James I of England, 283 00:13:58,171 --> 00:14:00,380 their mission was two‐fold. 284 00:14:00,381 --> 00:14:03,842 One, to establish a safe refue 285 00:14:03,843 --> 00:14:05,719 for Templar descendants in Nova Scotia. 286 00:14:05,720 --> 00:14:07,679 And their second objective, 287 00:14:07,680 --> 00:14:10,640 according to James McQuiston, was to add valuables to a vast 288 00:14:10,641 --> 00:14:14,019 Templar treasure vault that had been buried on Oak Island 289 00:14:14,020 --> 00:14:16,021 centuries earlier. 290 00:14:16,022 --> 00:14:20,233 The story starts with William Alexander working 291 00:14:20,234 --> 00:14:23,028 on this idea of creating the Knights Baronet of Nova Scotia. 292 00:14:23,029 --> 00:14:26,531 Immediately, clan chieftains started signing up. 293 00:14:26,532 --> 00:14:28,617 They were going to move out of Scotland, 294 00:14:28,618 --> 00:14:30,702 but they were going to get 30,000 acres, 295 00:14:30,703 --> 00:14:32,287 name their own town, 296 00:14:32,288 --> 00:14:34,372 lay it out the way they wanted to, and if you're gonna 297 00:14:34,373 --> 00:14:36,875 leave behind Scotland, well, you're not gonna 298 00:14:36,876 --> 00:14:39,169 leave all your valuables there. 299 00:14:39,170 --> 00:14:42,214 So, you would have clan valuables, and... 300 00:14:42,215 --> 00:14:45,050 I would say the first couple dozen of these Knights Baronet 301 00:14:45,051 --> 00:14:46,968 that signed up had connections 302 00:14:46,969 --> 00:14:48,553 backwards to the Knights Templar. 303 00:14:48,554 --> 00:14:50,222 So, they may have even‐even had some 304 00:14:50,223 --> 00:14:52,390 Templar artifacts in their family. 305 00:14:52,391 --> 00:14:56,228 I believe it was their best option to literally create 306 00:14:56,229 --> 00:14:58,730 the Money Pit and say, "We're gonna bury it. 307 00:14:58,731 --> 00:15:00,065 "We're gonna booby‐trap it. 308 00:15:00,066 --> 00:15:01,566 Nobody's gonna know about it." 309 00:15:01,567 --> 00:15:03,568 Well, on top of all that, if 310 00:15:03,569 --> 00:15:07,072 as if that wasn't enough, Sir William Alexander was 311 00:15:07,073 --> 00:15:10,992 leading a secret Templar Masonic order when he died, 312 00:15:10,993 --> 00:15:13,411 which may have simply been a description 313 00:15:13,412 --> 00:15:15,122 somebody made of the Freemasons. 314 00:15:15,123 --> 00:15:17,916 The bottom line is that it's more 315 00:15:17,917 --> 00:15:20,085 than apparent that the Scottish clan leaders, 316 00:15:20,086 --> 00:15:22,754 who became the Knights Baronet of Nova Scotia 317 00:15:22,755 --> 00:15:25,590 had a lot of links to the Freemasons. 318 00:15:25,591 --> 00:15:28,135 Sir William Alexander, 319 00:15:28,136 --> 00:15:30,262 the founder of the Knights Baronet, 320 00:15:30,263 --> 00:15:32,180 also a Freemason? 321 00:15:32,181 --> 00:15:36,351 For more than two centuries, the secret society of builders 322 00:15:36,352 --> 00:15:39,104 known as the Freemasons has been closely intertwined 323 00:15:39,105 --> 00:15:40,939 with the Oak Island mystery. 324 00:15:40,940 --> 00:15:43,775 Not only have prominent treasure hunters been members 325 00:15:43,776 --> 00:15:46,153 including Daniel McGinnis, 326 00:15:46,154 --> 00:15:48,488 M.R. Chappell, 327 00:15:48,489 --> 00:15:50,615 and Franklin Delano Roosevelt‐ 328 00:15:50,616 --> 00:15:53,160 but many sacred Masonic symbols 329 00:15:53,161 --> 00:15:55,120 such as the letter G, 330 00:15:55,121 --> 00:15:57,414 representing the great architect of the universe... 331 00:15:57,415 --> 00:15:59,624 triangles... 332 00:15:59,625 --> 00:16:03,170 and even what appears to be the all‐seeing eye... 333 00:16:03,171 --> 00:16:05,381 have been discovered on the island. 334 00:16:07,633 --> 00:16:10,969 So, right off the bat, you have the Alexanders 335 00:16:10,970 --> 00:16:12,846 controlling what became Freemasonry. 336 00:16:12,847 --> 00:16:16,808 The next person to take over the Freemasons of Nova Scotia 337 00:16:16,809 --> 00:16:19,060 was James Maclean. 338 00:16:19,061 --> 00:16:21,313 What a lot of people don't realize is that John Smith, 339 00:16:21,314 --> 00:16:23,398 who was one of the people who found the Money Pit, 340 00:16:23,399 --> 00:16:25,233 his mother was a Maclean. 341 00:16:25,234 --> 00:16:28,486 And the McGinnises were very tight with the Macleans. 342 00:16:28,487 --> 00:16:30,614 I mean, all of these families are connected. 343 00:16:30,615 --> 00:16:33,658 In 1795, 344 00:16:33,659 --> 00:16:35,827 after reportedly noticing strange lights 345 00:16:35,828 --> 00:16:37,662 coming from Oak Island, 346 00:16:37,663 --> 00:16:41,166 Daniel McGinnis and John Smith, along with their friend, 347 00:16:41,167 --> 00:16:43,877 Anthony Vaughn, took a boat from the mainland 348 00:16:43,878 --> 00:16:45,337 to investigate. 349 00:16:45,338 --> 00:16:47,923 There, they were stunned to find 350 00:16:47,924 --> 00:16:50,550 a mysterious, 13‐foot‐wide depression 351 00:16:50,551 --> 00:16:53,053 at the base of an old oak tre, 352 00:16:53,054 --> 00:16:56,223 which according to some accounts, was also carved 353 00:16:56,224 --> 00:16:58,016 with strange, Masonic symbols. 354 00:16:58,017 --> 00:17:00,769 Believing they had found the hiding place 355 00:17:00,770 --> 00:17:03,563 for a treasure vault, they began to dig. 356 00:17:03,564 --> 00:17:06,775 Over the course of several years, 357 00:17:06,776 --> 00:17:09,069 they made a number of shocking discoveries, 358 00:17:09,070 --> 00:17:12,280 such as platforms made of oak logs every ten feet, 359 00:17:12,281 --> 00:17:14,616 and at a depth of 90 feet, 360 00:17:14,617 --> 00:17:18,203 a stone slab with strange markings carved into it. 361 00:17:18,204 --> 00:17:21,081 But could McGinnis and his friends have found 362 00:17:21,082 --> 00:17:22,874 the legendary treasure shaft, 363 00:17:22,875 --> 00:17:25,627 not by chance, but by recognizing 364 00:17:25,628 --> 00:17:27,754 a number of carefully placed clues? 365 00:17:27,755 --> 00:17:30,966 Clues which they knew about through their association 366 00:17:30,967 --> 00:17:33,385 with Freemasonry, and by extension, 367 00:17:33,386 --> 00:17:35,512 the Knights Templar? 368 00:17:35,513 --> 00:17:39,057 I'm proposing that maybe they weren't just 369 00:17:39,058 --> 00:17:41,810 lollygagging around and tripped over the Money Pit, 370 00:17:41,811 --> 00:17:44,896 but they were actually here looking for something, 371 00:17:44,897 --> 00:17:46,982 looking for some sign of a buried treasure. 372 00:17:46,983 --> 00:17:49,067 That it had been carried down through 373 00:17:49,068 --> 00:17:51,736 the Alexander family, and through the Maclean family, 374 00:17:51,737 --> 00:17:53,989 and maybe the McGinnis family, and they were, 375 00:17:53,990 --> 00:17:55,782 uh, looking for something when they found it. 376 00:17:55,783 --> 00:17:57,409 They just didn't trip over it. 377 00:17:57,410 --> 00:17:59,452 It's really interesting now. 378 00:17:59,453 --> 00:18:00,620 Yeah. 379 00:18:00,621 --> 00:18:01,955 And that would explain why 380 00:18:01,956 --> 00:18:04,583 they so readily grabbed shovels 381 00:18:04,584 --> 00:18:07,127 and dug 30 foot down by thir 382 00:18:07,128 --> 00:18:09,296 'Cause that's a mammoth project for three guys. 383 00:18:09,297 --> 00:18:11,840 I mean, it's just a‐a big thing to do. 384 00:18:11,841 --> 00:18:14,634 So, that's my story and, uh, 385 00:18:14,635 --> 00:18:17,971 I appreciate you giving me a chance to tell it. 386 00:18:17,972 --> 00:18:19,889 But, um... 387 00:18:19,890 --> 00:18:22,684 history continues to reveal itself. 388 00:18:22,685 --> 00:18:24,477 I have to say this, James. 389 00:18:24,478 --> 00:18:26,646 It's been, uh, an incredible pleasure 390 00:18:26,647 --> 00:18:28,857 uh, to‐to be witness 391 00:18:28,858 --> 00:18:30,567 to‐to what you have accomplished. 392 00:18:30,568 --> 00:18:31,651 Thank you, Jim. 393 00:18:31,652 --> 00:18:32,737 ‐Thank you. ‐Appreciate it. 394 00:18:37,366 --> 00:18:40,285 As a new day begins on Oak Island... 395 00:18:40,286 --> 00:18:43,288 Here we are, guys. 396 00:18:43,289 --> 00:18:45,582 ...Marty Lagina, Charles Barkhouse, 397 00:18:45,583 --> 00:18:47,834 surveyor Steve Guptill, 398 00:18:47,835 --> 00:18:52,255 and archeologist Laird Niven arrive on Lot 21. 399 00:18:52,256 --> 00:18:54,674 In light of the new research presented one day ago 400 00:18:54,675 --> 00:18:57,385 by theorist James McQuiston, 401 00:18:57,386 --> 00:18:59,179 they are eager to further investigate 402 00:18:59,180 --> 00:19:01,431 the early 19th century foundation 403 00:19:01,432 --> 00:19:04,601 of what was once the home of Daniel McGinnis. 404 00:19:04,602 --> 00:19:08,146 Although any investigation of the site has previously been 405 00:19:08,147 --> 00:19:11,608 restricted by the provincial government of Nova Scotia, 406 00:19:11,609 --> 00:19:14,486 Laird Niven has been able to help the team obtain a permit 407 00:19:14,487 --> 00:19:16,404 to conduct a near‐surface 408 00:19:16,405 --> 00:19:19,157 archeological excavation of the area. 409 00:19:19,158 --> 00:19:20,742 Okay, Laird, this is your show. 410 00:19:20,743 --> 00:19:22,952 You are clearly in charge at this point. 411 00:19:22,953 --> 00:19:24,496 Mm‐hmm. ‐You know, examining this is 412 00:19:24,497 --> 00:19:26,998 certainly a step in the right direction 413 00:19:26,999 --> 00:19:29,709 of telling the‐the true story of what took place here. 414 00:19:29,710 --> 00:19:31,378 Is there any chance that these guys 415 00:19:31,379 --> 00:19:33,338 found a treasure or part of the treasure? 416 00:19:33,339 --> 00:19:36,299 That's the speculation. 417 00:19:36,300 --> 00:19:41,054 Following their discovery of the Money Pit in 1795, 418 00:19:41,055 --> 00:19:43,556 Daniel McGinnis and his friend John Smith 419 00:19:43,557 --> 00:19:46,267 each purchased land on the island, 420 00:19:46,268 --> 00:19:47,936 where they would spend the rest of their lives 421 00:19:47,937 --> 00:19:50,522 trying to solve the mystery. 422 00:19:50,523 --> 00:19:53,817 Although records suggest that they and their partners 423 00:19:53,818 --> 00:19:56,820 were never able to excavate below the 90‐foot level 424 00:19:56,821 --> 00:19:59,948 in the treasure shaft, due to the flood tunnels... 425 00:19:59,949 --> 00:20:04,119 Now, I've been told they found 426 00:20:04,120 --> 00:20:06,871 ‐three treasure chests. ‐Really? 427 00:20:06,872 --> 00:20:09,874 In 2015, Daniel McGinnis's 428 00:20:09,875 --> 00:20:12,544 direct descendants visited the island, 429 00:20:12,545 --> 00:20:15,422 and presented Rick, Marty, Craig and the team 430 00:20:15,423 --> 00:20:18,883 with a stunning artifact, which Joan McGinnis claimed 431 00:20:18,884 --> 00:20:20,593 had been passed down through generations 432 00:20:20,594 --> 00:20:23,346 ‐of the McGinnis family. ‐Oh, my goodness. 433 00:20:23,347 --> 00:20:26,599 Well, that is quite extraordinary. 434 00:20:26,600 --> 00:20:28,143 So, we have to do this right. 435 00:20:28,144 --> 00:20:29,728 ‐This is under permit, so why don't you ‐Yep. 436 00:20:29,729 --> 00:20:31,271 tell us what we need to do. 437 00:20:31,272 --> 00:20:33,231 So, we're setting up a baseline. 438 00:20:33,232 --> 00:20:35,233 ‐All right. ‐Yeah, so, here's a visual. 439 00:20:35,234 --> 00:20:37,610 Yeah, so, here are the anomalies right here. 440 00:20:37,611 --> 00:20:40,822 Baseline is running this way. 441 00:20:40,823 --> 00:20:43,742 Test pits are in here. 442 00:20:43,743 --> 00:20:46,077 We had an anomaly there. 443 00:20:46,078 --> 00:20:47,996 ‐ Okay. ‐It was a very strong anomaly 444 00:20:47,997 --> 00:20:50,582 ‐at about four feet down. ‐Earlier this year, 445 00:20:50,583 --> 00:20:52,917 the team enlisted ground penetrating radar experts, 446 00:20:52,918 --> 00:20:56,921 Steve Watson and Don Johnston to scan the area, 447 00:20:56,922 --> 00:20:58,882 and were stunned to find a number 448 00:20:58,883 --> 00:21:01,342 of underground anomalies, including 449 00:21:01,343 --> 00:21:04,012 a possible hidden sub‐basemen. 450 00:21:04,013 --> 00:21:06,765 Could it be that Daniel McGinnis kept 451 00:21:06,766 --> 00:21:09,768 a secret hiding place for what he found on Oak Island? 452 00:21:09,769 --> 00:21:13,772 If so, could important clues or valuables 453 00:21:13,773 --> 00:21:16,608 still be hidden somewhere on the property? 454 00:21:16,609 --> 00:21:19,903 Using the collected GPR data, 455 00:21:19,904 --> 00:21:23,156 Laird has designed an archeological search grid, 456 00:21:23,157 --> 00:21:24,699 which the team will methodically excavate 457 00:21:24,700 --> 00:21:26,951 in three‐foot sections known 458 00:21:26,952 --> 00:21:28,536 as "test pits." 459 00:21:28,537 --> 00:21:30,205 One of the most significant names 460 00:21:30,206 --> 00:21:32,457 way back in the beginning of all this was McGinnis. 461 00:21:32,458 --> 00:21:35,084 But his foundation, the foundation of his house 462 00:21:35,085 --> 00:21:38,338 has been off‐limits because it's an archaeological site. 463 00:21:38,339 --> 00:21:41,466 So, under Laird's supervision, we'll conduct 464 00:21:41,467 --> 00:21:44,511 a proper archaeological dig of the foundation 465 00:21:44,512 --> 00:21:45,553 and the surrounding area. 466 00:21:45,554 --> 00:21:46,846 And the hope is that 467 00:21:46,847 --> 00:21:49,390 that will provide us a greater understanding 468 00:21:49,391 --> 00:21:51,309 of their involvement and maybe the possibility 469 00:21:51,310 --> 00:21:53,186 that they may have found something significant 470 00:21:53,187 --> 00:21:54,229 long ago. 471 00:21:54,230 --> 00:21:55,648 It's time to dig. 472 00:22:04,031 --> 00:22:05,991 And then he does the shimmy. 473 00:22:08,035 --> 00:22:10,036 What you looking for? Bits of pottery 474 00:22:10,037 --> 00:22:11,538 ‐and things like that? ‐Yeah. 475 00:22:11,539 --> 00:22:13,206 But even every stone you should look at 476 00:22:13,207 --> 00:22:14,833 just in case, you know. 477 00:22:14,834 --> 00:22:17,293 ‐This is a high activity area. ‐ Yeah. 478 00:22:17,294 --> 00:22:19,838 ‐Sounds like a good place for people to drop things. ‐Yeah. 479 00:22:19,839 --> 00:22:21,339 Well, I think big picture, 480 00:22:21,340 --> 00:22:23,591 we're hoping, "Were they associated 481 00:22:23,592 --> 00:22:25,260 with the discovery of the Money Pit?" 482 00:22:25,261 --> 00:22:28,054 Mm‐hmm. ‐Things that say what happened here, right? 483 00:22:28,055 --> 00:22:30,515 Artifacts or features. ‐PETER: Mm‐hmm. 484 00:22:30,516 --> 00:22:32,183 ‐Yeah. ‐ Well, as per usual, 485 00:22:32,184 --> 00:22:33,351 ‐I'm more interested in artifacts. ‐Artifacts. 486 00:22:33,352 --> 00:22:34,602 Yeah, something with a date. 487 00:22:34,603 --> 00:22:36,896 So, with each bucketful, 488 00:22:36,897 --> 00:22:38,857 we'll be able to maybe get some answers? 489 00:22:38,858 --> 00:22:40,316 I hope so. I mean, 490 00:22:40,317 --> 00:22:42,443 ‐that's the intent, right? ‐PETER: Yeah. 491 00:22:42,444 --> 00:22:44,028 All right. Well, let's keep going. 492 00:22:44,029 --> 00:22:46,281 As Laird Niven and members of the team 493 00:22:46,282 --> 00:22:49,576 begin their investigation of the McGinnis foundation... 494 00:22:49,577 --> 00:22:53,454 You can see we're still into that thick, clay layer. 495 00:22:53,455 --> 00:22:56,416 Jack Begley, metal detection expert Gary Drayton, 496 00:22:56,417 --> 00:22:58,710 and heavy equipment operator Billy Gerhardt 497 00:22:58,711 --> 00:23:00,920 have resumed search operations 498 00:23:00,921 --> 00:23:03,006 in the Uplands area of Smith's Cove. 499 00:23:03,007 --> 00:23:04,799 A friend or a relative of the cross 500 00:23:04,800 --> 00:23:07,385 could be just beneath our feet. 501 00:23:07,386 --> 00:23:08,887 That's why we're here, mate. 502 00:23:08,888 --> 00:23:10,597 While the team reassesses 503 00:23:10,598 --> 00:23:12,473 their search options in the swamp 504 00:23:12,474 --> 00:23:15,059 and with a large‐scale dig in the Money Pit area 505 00:23:15,060 --> 00:23:17,145 now just a few weeks away, 506 00:23:17,146 --> 00:23:19,439 they have decided to redouble their efforts 507 00:23:19,440 --> 00:23:21,482 to locate and shut off 508 00:23:21,483 --> 00:23:24,485 the island's infamous booby‐trapped flooding system. 509 00:23:24,486 --> 00:23:26,696 I notice we're getting into thicker clay. 510 00:23:26,697 --> 00:23:28,156 Natural layer. 511 00:23:28,157 --> 00:23:29,949 Yeah, that's still clay. 512 00:23:29,950 --> 00:23:31,451 Just be nice to find a tunnel 513 00:23:31,452 --> 00:23:34,662 with a big sign saying, "Treasure this way." 514 00:23:34,663 --> 00:23:37,499 You know it's towards the Money Pit. 515 00:23:45,341 --> 00:23:47,343 That's wood. 516 00:23:48,385 --> 00:23:51,262 Yeah, a lot of timbers down there. 517 00:23:51,263 --> 00:23:52,597 That's definitely wood. 518 00:23:52,598 --> 00:23:54,515 ‐Oh, yeah! Yep. ‐Oh, we got a big piece of timber. 519 00:23:54,516 --> 00:23:56,392 ‐Yeah. ‐ I mean, 520 00:23:56,393 --> 00:23:58,144 that's deep for a piece of timber. 521 00:23:58,145 --> 00:23:59,854 Yeah, look. 522 00:23:59,855 --> 00:24:02,733 Yeah. There's one on its edge now, too. 523 00:24:04,401 --> 00:24:05,944 And that looks hollow under there 524 00:24:05,945 --> 00:24:07,236 unless that's just the way it... 525 00:24:07,237 --> 00:24:09,197 You think it's hollow over there? 526 00:24:09,198 --> 00:24:11,199 Kind of looks like a tunnel down there. 527 00:24:11,200 --> 00:24:12,785 Yeah. 528 00:24:16,830 --> 00:24:18,873 ‐Yeah. ‐ What have you found now, Jack? 529 00:24:18,874 --> 00:24:20,708 Some kind of a stump. 530 00:24:20,709 --> 00:24:23,294 I think we have to dig some more, 531 00:24:23,295 --> 00:24:25,088 expose more of this wood and see if it does 532 00:24:25,089 --> 00:24:26,381 ‐end up being a structure. ‐Yeah. 533 00:24:26,382 --> 00:24:27,715 I'll just pick it out. 534 00:24:27,716 --> 00:24:30,219 ‐We'll see what it... ‐Yeah. 535 00:24:32,721 --> 00:24:35,307 Oh, that's really big. 536 00:24:36,308 --> 00:24:37,475 Pull it away, Billy! 537 00:24:37,476 --> 00:24:39,436 There's something underneath it. 538 00:24:45,484 --> 00:24:47,819 What is that, mate? That looks like a tunnel. 539 00:24:47,820 --> 00:24:51,115 Yeah, I‐I think this is the tunnel we're looking for. 540 00:24:51,991 --> 00:24:53,533 There's stacked timbers. 541 00:24:53,534 --> 00:24:56,744 I think we ran into the tunnel that's leading... 542 00:24:56,745 --> 00:24:58,663 ‐That's what it looks like to me. ‐ I mean, it might 543 00:24:58,664 --> 00:25:01,290 ‐just be by searchers, but we're in the right spot. ‐ Yeah. 544 00:25:01,291 --> 00:25:03,251 Yeah, that's got 545 00:25:03,252 --> 00:25:05,545 all the makings of being a tunnel, mate. 546 00:25:05,546 --> 00:25:07,130 Timbers running that way. 547 00:25:07,131 --> 00:25:08,965 The hole. 548 00:25:08,966 --> 00:25:10,299 That's sweet! 549 00:25:10,300 --> 00:25:14,178 A possible tunnel or shaft? 550 00:25:14,179 --> 00:25:15,847 Could it be from previous search efforts 551 00:25:15,848 --> 00:25:18,016 to intercept the main flood tunnel? 552 00:25:18,017 --> 00:25:20,435 Or could it be a structure 553 00:25:20,436 --> 00:25:24,690 used to create the flood system centuries ago? 554 00:25:26,775 --> 00:25:28,609 All right, what do we got? What do we got? 555 00:25:28,610 --> 00:25:31,571 I think we've opened up a wooden Pandora's box here. 556 00:25:31,572 --> 00:25:33,448 I mean, look at all these timbers. 557 00:25:33,449 --> 00:25:36,868 All different sizes and shapes. 558 00:25:36,869 --> 00:25:38,119 I think we might have hit 559 00:25:38,120 --> 00:25:40,538 a collapsed tunnel or some sort 560 00:25:40,539 --> 00:25:43,291 of linear feature of wood that got disturbed. 561 00:25:43,292 --> 00:25:45,168 Huh. Excuse me, Gary. 562 00:25:45,169 --> 00:25:46,545 I‐I'm gonna go have a look. 563 00:25:48,130 --> 00:25:49,797 And we've only just got into it, 564 00:25:49,798 --> 00:25:51,424 so we figure we'd give you a call 565 00:25:51,425 --> 00:25:54,385 and see what you make of it before we dig it out. 566 00:25:54,386 --> 00:25:58,139 Maybe we cut through the fabled flood tunnel. 567 00:25:58,140 --> 00:25:59,807 Now we have to follow it back. 568 00:25:59,808 --> 00:26:01,601 It could be yet another clue 569 00:26:01,602 --> 00:26:03,478 as to where the original Money Pit was. 570 00:26:03,479 --> 00:26:05,147 So let's go dig it up. 571 00:26:09,902 --> 00:26:11,235 Come here. Look at this. 572 00:26:11,236 --> 00:26:13,322 Is this coconut fiber? 573 00:26:14,573 --> 00:26:17,617 I think there's big chunks of coconut fiber. 574 00:26:17,618 --> 00:26:19,703 That is very interesting. 575 00:26:23,248 --> 00:26:25,792 Look at this, Rick. 576 00:26:25,793 --> 00:26:27,795 Think that's coconut fiber? 577 00:26:29,880 --> 00:26:31,798 That is interesting. Well, 578 00:26:31,799 --> 00:26:33,049 ‐it's hairlike. ‐ Yeah. 579 00:26:33,050 --> 00:26:34,759 Yeah. And it's clumped, as well. 580 00:26:34,760 --> 00:26:35,968 Yeah, no, that's... 581 00:26:35,969 --> 00:26:37,929 ‐That is very interesting. ‐Yeah. 582 00:26:37,930 --> 00:26:41,224 The presence of coconut fiber is curious 583 00:26:41,225 --> 00:26:44,602 not only because the nearest indigenous coconut trees 584 00:26:44,603 --> 00:26:48,106 are more than 1,500 miles away from Oak Island 585 00:26:48,107 --> 00:26:50,108 but also because it was discovered 586 00:26:50,109 --> 00:26:52,276 by Daniel McGinnis and his tem 587 00:26:52,277 --> 00:26:53,736 some 60 feet deep 588 00:26:53,737 --> 00:26:56,280 in the original Money Pit in 1804 589 00:26:56,281 --> 00:26:59,325 and then by members of The Truro Company 590 00:26:59,326 --> 00:27:02,120 at Smith's Cove in 1850. 591 00:27:02,121 --> 00:27:05,581 It was there that a massive layer of it was discovered, 592 00:27:05,582 --> 00:27:09,085 covering and acting as a filter for the five stone box drains 593 00:27:09,086 --> 00:27:11,420 which converge into the main flood tunnel 594 00:27:11,421 --> 00:27:14,298 that the team is currently looking for. 595 00:27:14,299 --> 00:27:16,634 If the material the team has found 596 00:27:16,635 --> 00:27:20,263 can be scientifically verified to be coconut fiber, 597 00:27:20,264 --> 00:27:22,473 it could mean the team is closer than ever 598 00:27:22,474 --> 00:27:24,809 to finding and shutting off the booby trap 599 00:27:24,810 --> 00:27:27,603 that has thwarted efforts to excavate the Money Pit 600 00:27:27,604 --> 00:27:30,147 for more than two centuries. 601 00:27:30,148 --> 00:27:32,817 ‐ How much of it is there, Jack? ‐Um... 602 00:27:32,818 --> 00:27:34,193 There's a lot of it over here. 603 00:27:34,194 --> 00:27:35,987 You'd need a lot to pack a lot of treasure. 604 00:27:35,988 --> 00:27:38,990 ‐We need... we need to bag this. ‐Mm. 605 00:27:38,991 --> 00:27:40,491 So, let's try 606 00:27:40,492 --> 00:27:42,076 to get a sample without touching it. 607 00:27:42,077 --> 00:27:43,828 ‐ Yep. ‐ Yeah. Just open the bag 608 00:27:43,829 --> 00:27:46,039 and use the bag like a glove. 609 00:27:48,041 --> 00:27:51,043 Oh, yeah. There's a big chunk of it. 610 00:27:51,044 --> 00:27:53,170 ‐ That's it. Grab a big clump. 611 00:27:53,171 --> 00:27:54,505 Look at that. 612 00:27:54,506 --> 00:27:56,340 ‐And there's still a bunch more. ‐Yeah. 613 00:27:56,341 --> 00:27:58,843 ‐There's a whole bunch more right there. ‐Yeah. 614 00:27:58,844 --> 00:28:01,512 Yep. This bit of coconut fiber 615 00:28:01,513 --> 00:28:04,850 makes me think that we might be into original works. 616 00:28:06,810 --> 00:28:08,644 There's a lot going on right here. 617 00:28:08,645 --> 00:28:10,897 Rather massive structure going on here. 618 00:28:10,898 --> 00:28:12,064 Yes. 619 00:28:12,065 --> 00:28:14,358 There are only a few things 620 00:28:14,359 --> 00:28:18,988 that I find absolutely unique 621 00:28:18,989 --> 00:28:20,531 to this quest, to this search, 622 00:28:20,532 --> 00:28:22,241 and one of them is coconut fiber. 623 00:28:22,242 --> 00:28:25,244 I want a definitive test, 624 00:28:25,245 --> 00:28:29,040 science‐based, that it is indeed coconut fiber. 625 00:28:29,041 --> 00:28:30,708 So do I, Rick. 626 00:28:30,709 --> 00:28:33,044 ‐Is that enough of this, Rick? ‐ Yeah, that's enough. 627 00:28:33,045 --> 00:28:35,087 ‐I'll put it to safety. ‐Good. 628 00:28:35,088 --> 00:28:37,965 I'm actually kind of excited about this. 629 00:28:37,966 --> 00:28:39,551 Absolutely. 630 00:28:43,013 --> 00:28:45,222 The following day, 631 00:28:45,223 --> 00:28:48,059 as members of the team continue to carefully excavate 632 00:28:48,060 --> 00:28:49,602 in the Uplands... 633 00:28:49,603 --> 00:28:51,729 It's like ye old times. 634 00:28:51,730 --> 00:28:53,898 We're back again at Carmen Legge's. 635 00:28:53,899 --> 00:28:56,734 ...Marty Lagina, along with his son Alex 636 00:28:56,735 --> 00:28:58,110 and Gary Drayton, 637 00:28:58,111 --> 00:29:00,404 travel some 20 miles north of Oak Island 638 00:29:00,405 --> 00:29:02,156 to the Ross Farm Museum, 639 00:29:02,157 --> 00:29:06,202 located in the town of New Ross, Nova Scotia. 640 00:29:06,203 --> 00:29:07,411 They have arranged 641 00:29:07,412 --> 00:29:09,705 for blacksmithing expert Carmen Legge 642 00:29:09,706 --> 00:29:11,916 to examine the mysterious metal object 643 00:29:11,917 --> 00:29:13,960 found two days ago in the swap 644 00:29:13,961 --> 00:29:16,837 near the area where seismic scanning 645 00:29:16,838 --> 00:29:19,757 detected a 200‐foot‐long, ship‐shaped anomaly 646 00:29:19,758 --> 00:29:22,218 earlier this year. 647 00:29:22,219 --> 00:29:24,178 We got some stuff we're trying to figure out. 648 00:29:24,179 --> 00:29:26,181 ‐Should I put them on this table? ‐Yep. 649 00:29:27,724 --> 00:29:29,141 Right. 650 00:29:29,142 --> 00:29:31,936 This came out of the swamp. 651 00:29:31,937 --> 00:29:33,896 And the story with this 652 00:29:33,897 --> 00:29:37,274 is Jack and I saw this conical boulder 653 00:29:37,275 --> 00:29:39,443 sticking out of the edge of the swamp, 654 00:29:39,444 --> 00:29:42,446 and it just drew attention to it. 655 00:29:42,447 --> 00:29:44,615 And that was found right at the side 656 00:29:44,616 --> 00:29:46,076 of the conical boulder. 657 00:29:59,297 --> 00:30:01,258 Does it look old to you? 658 00:30:05,470 --> 00:30:07,221 ‐There you go. ‐ Sweet. 659 00:30:07,222 --> 00:30:09,473 ‐Yeah, I love those dates. 660 00:30:09,474 --> 00:30:11,100 Yeah, 'cause when we first pulled it out, 661 00:30:11,101 --> 00:30:13,185 we thought maybe it was, like, the... 662 00:30:13,186 --> 00:30:16,647 the bottom of the leg of a survey stake, 663 00:30:16,648 --> 00:30:18,065 but it's so chunky. 664 00:30:18,066 --> 00:30:19,693 It's so heavy. 665 00:30:22,654 --> 00:30:24,281 Too heavy? 666 00:30:26,283 --> 00:30:28,243 Mm‐hmm. Mm. 667 00:30:35,250 --> 00:30:36,626 Wow. 668 00:30:46,636 --> 00:30:48,179 That's what we're looking for in the swamp. 669 00:30:48,180 --> 00:30:49,889 ‐From the right time period. ‐Yeah. 670 00:30:49,890 --> 00:30:51,515 Wow. 671 00:30:51,516 --> 00:30:54,351 An 18th century pike pole 672 00:30:54,352 --> 00:30:57,980 possibly used to maneuver a large ship? 673 00:30:57,981 --> 00:30:59,690 Also known as a boat hook, 674 00:30:59,691 --> 00:31:03,360 a pike pole was a long wooden or metal tool 675 00:31:03,361 --> 00:31:06,447 with one end featuring a hook and blunt‐pointed tip 676 00:31:06,448 --> 00:31:10,201 for pushing and pulling faraway objects. 677 00:31:10,202 --> 00:31:12,703 Commonly found on shipping wharfs, 678 00:31:12,704 --> 00:31:16,082 these pike poles would serve as a docking aid 679 00:31:16,083 --> 00:31:17,500 to guide sailing vessels 680 00:31:17,501 --> 00:31:20,169 in and out of a boat slip or pier. 681 00:31:20,170 --> 00:31:22,129 But what would a pike pole be doing 682 00:31:22,130 --> 00:31:24,215 in the Oak Island swamp? 683 00:31:24,216 --> 00:31:26,258 Could it be another key piece of evidence 684 00:31:26,259 --> 00:31:28,886 that a ship could have been deliberately sunk there 685 00:31:28,887 --> 00:31:30,554 in order to hide it 686 00:31:30,555 --> 00:31:34,225 along with the precious cargo it contained? 687 00:31:34,226 --> 00:31:37,394 He's quite certain it's off a sailing ship. 688 00:31:37,395 --> 00:31:40,064 All right. What does that mean? 689 00:31:40,065 --> 00:31:42,483 I guess it could mean 690 00:31:42,484 --> 00:31:45,027 that there was once a ship in the swamp. 691 00:31:45,028 --> 00:31:47,947 The data's getting overwhelming that something happened 692 00:31:47,948 --> 00:31:49,740 mid‐1700s here. 693 00:31:49,741 --> 00:31:51,367 You know, Carmen, right about the time 694 00:31:51,368 --> 00:31:53,702 I give up on the swamp, it produces something like that. 695 00:31:53,703 --> 00:31:55,246 Because there's been bits and bobs 696 00:31:55,247 --> 00:31:57,665 of ships coming out of there since we started. 697 00:31:57,666 --> 00:31:59,708 Just tiny bits like this. 698 00:31:59,709 --> 00:32:02,128 But the bottom line, thank you for analyzing it. 699 00:32:02,129 --> 00:32:03,462 I appreciate it. 700 00:32:03,463 --> 00:32:04,922 And we'll be back. We'll be back. 701 00:32:04,923 --> 00:32:06,340 We're gonna find some more stuff. 702 00:32:06,341 --> 00:32:07,883 We'll definitely be back. We need to know 703 00:32:07,884 --> 00:32:09,135 ‐what this stuff is. ‐ Yeah. 704 00:32:09,136 --> 00:32:11,096 Thanks for the great news. 705 00:32:14,474 --> 00:32:16,308 Seeing anything else, Rick? 706 00:32:16,309 --> 00:32:17,601 There's a board here. 707 00:32:17,602 --> 00:32:19,520 Another piece of wood right here. 708 00:32:19,521 --> 00:32:22,148 Following his visit with blacksmithing expert, 709 00:32:22,149 --> 00:32:25,901 Carmen Legge, metal detection expert Gary Drayton 710 00:32:25,902 --> 00:32:28,487 has joined Rick Lagina, Jack Begley 711 00:32:28,488 --> 00:32:31,740 and heavy equipment operator Billy Gerhardt 712 00:32:31,741 --> 00:32:33,492 as they continue their excavation 713 00:32:33,493 --> 00:32:35,369 of a mysterious wooden shaft 714 00:32:35,370 --> 00:32:38,372 located in the Uplands near Smith's Cove 715 00:32:38,373 --> 00:32:42,418 a shaft that may be connected to the main flood tunnel 716 00:32:42,419 --> 00:32:45,297 believed to feed seawater into the Money Pit. 717 00:32:47,883 --> 00:32:50,134 Definitely a heck of a lot of timber here, 718 00:32:50,135 --> 00:32:51,510 and it's been... 719 00:32:51,511 --> 00:32:52,887 smashed. 720 00:32:52,888 --> 00:32:55,764 Yeah, 'cause if this is one structure... 721 00:32:55,765 --> 00:32:58,392 this is one of the biggest ones we've run across. 722 00:32:58,393 --> 00:32:59,936 Yep. 723 00:33:08,945 --> 00:33:10,362 Whoa. 724 00:33:10,363 --> 00:33:12,365 Yeah, thick clay. 725 00:33:14,075 --> 00:33:15,701 It's not the clay. 726 00:33:15,702 --> 00:33:17,453 It's wood every... 727 00:33:17,454 --> 00:33:19,622 everywhere. 728 00:33:19,623 --> 00:33:20,956 You got a board here, 729 00:33:20,957 --> 00:33:24,336 a board here, a board here, a board here. 730 00:33:26,129 --> 00:33:27,755 And then there's a... 731 00:33:27,756 --> 00:33:30,132 log or beam... 732 00:33:30,133 --> 00:33:31,717 right here. 733 00:33:31,718 --> 00:33:33,802 When you look from the top, it all seems 734 00:33:33,803 --> 00:33:36,180 to be running towards the Money Pit. 735 00:33:36,181 --> 00:33:38,098 Maybe we are in... 736 00:33:38,099 --> 00:33:40,476 one of those old tunnels or close by. 737 00:33:40,477 --> 00:33:42,728 I think that... we'd be foolish 738 00:33:42,729 --> 00:33:45,564 not to investigate everything as though it were. 739 00:33:45,565 --> 00:33:47,316 I think we're on the right path here. 740 00:33:47,317 --> 00:33:49,401 Expose, so Billy gets a line, and then... 741 00:33:49,402 --> 00:33:51,862 just keep creeping in and try to find 742 00:33:51,863 --> 00:33:53,822 a structure well‐defined. 743 00:33:53,823 --> 00:33:55,115 All right, how about... 744 00:33:55,116 --> 00:33:57,243 ‐we step out of the way and... ‐Yeah. 745 00:33:57,244 --> 00:33:59,246 ...let Billy do his thing. 746 00:34:01,331 --> 00:34:02,581 We're hitting wood 747 00:34:02,582 --> 00:34:04,833 in the Smith's Cove Uplands, 748 00:34:04,834 --> 00:34:07,753 and I'm hoping this could be the activities 749 00:34:07,754 --> 00:34:10,673 of the original depositors. I mean, 750 00:34:10,674 --> 00:34:12,216 we have to keep digging. 751 00:34:12,217 --> 00:34:15,302 This is a very interesting, uh, development. 752 00:34:15,303 --> 00:34:17,681 Uh, who knows where it will lead? 753 00:34:20,642 --> 00:34:22,810 Hey, Rick. 754 00:34:22,811 --> 00:34:25,020 ‐What you guys got? ‐Actually, Marty, 755 00:34:25,021 --> 00:34:29,316 we're continuing to dig up this collapsed tunnel. 756 00:34:29,317 --> 00:34:30,818 In the middle is clay, 757 00:34:30,819 --> 00:34:34,321 and we hit a layer of whoa! 758 00:34:34,322 --> 00:34:36,573 Look at that! 759 00:34:36,574 --> 00:34:38,575 You hit a gusher. 760 00:34:38,576 --> 00:34:40,412 Wow. 761 00:34:46,001 --> 00:34:48,919 What's interesting about it is, there's rocks. 762 00:34:48,920 --> 00:34:50,422 And there's rocks here. 763 00:34:51,423 --> 00:34:52,756 Yeah. 764 00:34:52,757 --> 00:34:55,175 Kind of like what we found in Smith's Cove. 765 00:34:55,176 --> 00:34:57,761 Could the massive and sudden water flow mean 766 00:34:57,762 --> 00:34:59,805 that the team has finally intercepted 767 00:34:59,806 --> 00:35:03,601 the main flood tunnel connected to the Money Pit? 768 00:35:03,602 --> 00:35:07,397 It just started gushing water out. 769 00:35:09,065 --> 00:35:11,443 Just a lot of organic material. 770 00:35:17,574 --> 00:35:19,783 It's a big hole. 771 00:35:19,784 --> 00:35:21,620 Oh. 772 00:35:26,291 --> 00:35:28,834 It goes way down beyond the shovel. 773 00:35:28,835 --> 00:35:31,253 It just keeps going. 774 00:35:31,254 --> 00:35:32,504 Is that actually a hole? 775 00:35:32,505 --> 00:35:33,756 Watch. 776 00:35:33,757 --> 00:35:35,592 This is how deep it is. 777 00:35:40,972 --> 00:35:43,307 Well, that's a little odd, isn't it? 778 00:35:44,851 --> 00:35:47,144 There's no bottom, either. 779 00:35:47,145 --> 00:35:49,396 What if it's a shaft, not filled? 780 00:35:49,397 --> 00:35:51,065 So maybe this is... 781 00:35:51,066 --> 00:35:55,152 a spot where the shaft transcended down into a tunnel? 782 00:35:55,153 --> 00:35:56,655 This might be Shaft Five. 783 00:35:58,114 --> 00:36:00,449 The one that intercepted the flood tunnel. 784 00:36:01,868 --> 00:36:04,411 Shaft Five? 785 00:36:04,412 --> 00:36:07,081 In 1850, following their discovery 786 00:36:07,082 --> 00:36:09,041 of the five stone box drains, 787 00:36:09,042 --> 00:36:11,335 which converged into a single flood tunnel 788 00:36:11,336 --> 00:36:12,920 beneath Smith's Cove, 789 00:36:12,921 --> 00:36:15,214 members of The Truro Company 790 00:36:15,215 --> 00:36:18,258 began sinking a wood‐cribbed shaft in the Uplands area 791 00:36:18,259 --> 00:36:20,260 hoping to locate and cut off 792 00:36:20,261 --> 00:36:23,764 the booby trap that fed seawater into the Money Pit. 793 00:36:23,765 --> 00:36:27,142 At a depth of 35 feet, they encountered 794 00:36:27,143 --> 00:36:29,978 a large boulder that blocked their path. 795 00:36:29,979 --> 00:36:31,980 However, when it was removed, 796 00:36:31,981 --> 00:36:35,401 the shaft suddenly began filling with ocean water, 797 00:36:35,402 --> 00:36:39,113 leading them to believe they had intercepted their target. 798 00:36:39,114 --> 00:36:41,949 Unfortunately, the effort proved unsuccessful 799 00:36:41,950 --> 00:36:43,951 in stopping the water flow, 800 00:36:43,952 --> 00:36:46,954 and Shaft Five was abandoned. 801 00:36:46,955 --> 00:36:48,956 The earlier searchers knew 802 00:36:48,957 --> 00:36:50,791 where the finger drains converged, 803 00:36:50,792 --> 00:36:52,793 at least in a general sense. 804 00:36:52,794 --> 00:36:55,879 And they literally were trying to shut off the flood tunnel. 805 00:36:55,880 --> 00:36:58,215 Now, what I'm hoping is... 806 00:36:58,216 --> 00:37:00,843 that we find the flood tunnel itself. 807 00:37:00,844 --> 00:37:05,013 Because we do know that they thought they were very close. 808 00:37:05,014 --> 00:37:08,809 And we need to excavate and see what they found. 809 00:37:08,810 --> 00:37:11,603 So let's see how deep it goes, 810 00:37:11,604 --> 00:37:14,566 and then... decide what to do. 811 00:37:24,242 --> 00:37:27,411 As a new day begins on Oak Island, 812 00:37:27,412 --> 00:37:30,414 and as the excavation of what could be Shaft Five 813 00:37:30,415 --> 00:37:32,666 continues near Smith's Cove... 814 00:37:32,667 --> 00:37:35,043 Guys, thanks for assembling on quick notice. 815 00:37:35,044 --> 00:37:36,462 I appreciate it. 816 00:37:36,463 --> 00:37:38,255 ...brothers Rick and Marty Lagina 817 00:37:38,256 --> 00:37:41,759 have gathered members of the team in the war room 818 00:37:41,760 --> 00:37:43,761 to hear a scientific report via telephone conference 819 00:37:43,762 --> 00:37:46,430 from geoscientist Dr. Ian Spooner 820 00:37:46,431 --> 00:37:51,394 regarding the potential cocont fiber found there two days ag. 821 00:37:52,771 --> 00:37:55,022 Yeah, Ian. You've got Marty and Rick 822 00:37:55,023 --> 00:37:57,609 and Doug and Steve and Alex. 823 00:38:00,612 --> 00:38:03,447 Well, we‐we'd like to think so. Sure. 824 00:38:03,448 --> 00:38:07,075 Anyway, I know you had some information. 825 00:38:07,076 --> 00:38:08,286 Okay. 826 00:38:27,222 --> 00:38:28,514 Wow. 827 00:38:28,515 --> 00:38:29,974 So it's coconut fiber? 828 00:38:30,850 --> 00:38:32,685 That's cool. 829 00:38:33,686 --> 00:38:35,187 News that the material 830 00:38:35,188 --> 00:38:37,189 that the team has found is, in fact, 831 00:38:37,190 --> 00:38:41,485 coconut fiber is a potentially historic development. 832 00:38:41,486 --> 00:38:44,738 It suggests that, after years of searching, 833 00:38:44,739 --> 00:38:48,325 Rick, Marty and the team may finally be on the verge 834 00:38:48,326 --> 00:38:50,494 of locating the main flood tunnel, 835 00:38:50,495 --> 00:38:53,163 which was constructed more than two centuries ago, 836 00:38:53,164 --> 00:38:56,625 in order to protect something believed to be of great value 837 00:38:56,626 --> 00:38:59,002 buried in the Money Pit. 838 00:38:59,003 --> 00:39:00,838 You've never seen anything like it, and you've dug 839 00:39:00,839 --> 00:39:02,924 a lot of stuff out of the walls of soil, right? 840 00:39:06,469 --> 00:39:08,054 Wow. 841 00:39:12,016 --> 00:39:13,642 No, that's fabulous. I mean, 842 00:39:13,643 --> 00:39:16,520 we found lots of structures in Smith's Cove, 843 00:39:16,521 --> 00:39:18,689 but the difference is, this one we found now 844 00:39:18,690 --> 00:39:21,692 has all this coconut fiber, and that's a pretty key difference. 845 00:39:21,693 --> 00:39:23,694 Absolutely. 846 00:39:23,695 --> 00:39:25,404 Hey, thanks for the quick info on that. 847 00:39:25,405 --> 00:39:27,531 That's pretty cool. 848 00:39:27,532 --> 00:39:28,657 Yeah, okay, good deal. Thanks. 849 00:39:28,658 --> 00:39:30,409 ‐Cheers. ‐Bye. 850 00:39:30,410 --> 00:39:32,202 ‐Bye. ‐DOUG: You've been questioning 851 00:39:32,203 --> 00:39:33,954 the lack of coconut fiber, 852 00:39:33,955 --> 00:39:36,039 so it's kind of cool to come up with. 853 00:39:36,040 --> 00:39:38,667 At least that says, yeah, at one time there was some 854 00:39:38,668 --> 00:39:40,627 ‐of this here. ‐It's something different. 855 00:39:40,628 --> 00:39:41,962 It's confirmation 856 00:39:41,963 --> 00:39:43,714 of the old stories 857 00:39:43,715 --> 00:39:45,465 that they found tremendous amounts of coconut fiber 858 00:39:45,466 --> 00:39:47,467 when they were looking for the box drains. 859 00:39:47,468 --> 00:39:49,595 And it appeared to have been placed as a filter. 860 00:39:49,596 --> 00:39:53,557 ‐The Restalls noted that there was gobs of it. ‐Not only that, 861 00:39:53,558 --> 00:39:55,475 but nobody else put a bunch of coconut fiber down 862 00:39:55,476 --> 00:39:58,228 while they were doing anything in Smith's Cove, so... 863 00:39:58,229 --> 00:39:59,688 it represents original work. 864 00:39:59,689 --> 00:40:01,732 Represents original work. 865 00:40:01,733 --> 00:40:02,941 And very cool. 866 00:40:02,942 --> 00:40:04,443 At the end of the day, 867 00:40:04,444 --> 00:40:05,777 we were looking for... 868 00:40:05,778 --> 00:40:07,738 evidence... 869 00:40:07,739 --> 00:40:10,574 that would corroborate or confirm 870 00:40:10,575 --> 00:40:12,743 ‐the old story, right? ‐Yes. 871 00:40:12,744 --> 00:40:14,578 Now we have this evidence 872 00:40:14,579 --> 00:40:16,371 that it is indeed coconut fiber. 873 00:40:16,372 --> 00:40:18,290 So there's some kind 874 00:40:18,291 --> 00:40:20,959 of original something going on here. 875 00:40:20,960 --> 00:40:23,128 We're certainly finding 876 00:40:23,129 --> 00:40:24,922 what people were originally looking for. 877 00:40:24,923 --> 00:40:27,008 I think we're absolutely closing in. 878 00:40:27,926 --> 00:40:29,384 Okay, let's go. 879 00:40:29,385 --> 00:40:31,762 We're gonna find it out. 880 00:40:31,763 --> 00:40:34,640 For Rick, Marty and their team, 881 00:40:34,641 --> 00:40:37,267 a week that began with finding 882 00:40:37,268 --> 00:40:39,102 a promising new clue in the swamp 883 00:40:39,103 --> 00:40:42,773 has ended with a potential breakthrough discovery. 884 00:40:42,774 --> 00:40:46,944 One that means they could be closer than anyone before them 885 00:40:46,945 --> 00:40:48,779 to intercepting and disabling 886 00:40:48,780 --> 00:40:51,823 Oak Island's legendary booby traps. 887 00:40:51,824 --> 00:40:53,533 But even if they are successful, 888 00:40:53,534 --> 00:40:56,954 will they finally be able to uncover 889 00:40:56,955 --> 00:40:59,331 Oak Island's centuries‐old secret, 890 00:40:59,332 --> 00:41:02,626 somewhere deep inside the fabled Money Pit? 891 00:41:02,627 --> 00:41:07,673 Or will they find that this mystery is much more complex 892 00:41:07,674 --> 00:41:11,927 and more dangerous than they could ever have imagined? 893 00:41:15,139 --> 00:41:18,058 Next time on The Curse of Oak Island... 894 00:41:18,059 --> 00:41:20,811 Time to look into the Eye. 895 00:41:20,812 --> 00:41:22,729 That's a big boulder. 896 00:41:22,730 --> 00:41:24,731 Nolan's Cross stones aren't that big. 897 00:41:24,732 --> 00:41:27,442 ‐We're the first ones to ever see these. ‐Exactly. 898 00:41:27,443 --> 00:41:29,820 This year it's go big or go home. 899 00:41:29,821 --> 00:41:31,363 What are you doing with this itty‐bitty thing? 900 00:41:31,364 --> 00:41:32,990 ‐We ordered a big excavator. 901 00:41:32,991 --> 00:41:34,866 Geez, that's long! 902 00:41:34,867 --> 00:41:36,827 It's all about the flood tunnel. 903 00:41:36,828 --> 00:41:38,161 Oh, yeah! Did you see that rush 904 00:41:38,162 --> 00:41:40,080 of water come in down there? 905 00:41:40,081 --> 00:41:42,332 You can see it squirting up like a geyser. 906 00:41:42,333 --> 00:41:45,086 Subtitled by Diego Moraes / Ewerton Henrique www.oakisland.tk 68319

Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.