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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:03,587 --> 00:00:05,923 ‐It's definitely a void. ‐We're gonna see right now if we get a full scoop. 2 00:00:05,923 --> 00:00:07,799 MARTY: We're hoping we'll find the Chappell Vault. 3 00:00:07,799 --> 00:00:09,843 NARRATOR: It's the exciting season finale. 4 00:00:09,843 --> 00:00:11,386 IAN: The dates are rather extraordinary. 5 00:00:11,386 --> 00:00:12,554 ‐Wow. ‐(laughs) 6 00:00:12,554 --> 00:00:13,847 We have a definitive date 7 00:00:13,847 --> 00:00:16,099 when the swamp was built. 8 00:00:16,099 --> 00:00:18,852 ‐It's a coin! ‐That's proof positive. 9 00:00:18,852 --> 00:00:21,813 ‐That tells quite a story. ‐That might be the find of the year. 10 00:00:21,813 --> 00:00:24,024 We may have a real whodunit. 11 00:00:24,024 --> 00:00:26,193 And we've got an artifact you can hold in your hand. 12 00:00:26,193 --> 00:00:27,569 ‐Medieval. ‐Medieval, baby! 13 00:00:27,569 --> 00:00:28,820 (laughter) 14 00:00:31,114 --> 00:00:34,743 NARRATOR: There is an island in the North Atlantic 15 00:00:34,743 --> 00:00:38,247 where people have been looking for an incredible treasure 16 00:00:38,247 --> 00:00:41,542 for more than 200 years. 17 00:00:41,542 --> 00:00:44,628 So far, they have found a stone slab 18 00:00:44,628 --> 00:00:47,297 with strange symbols carved into it, 19 00:00:47,297 --> 00:00:50,133 mysterious fragments of human bone, 20 00:00:50,133 --> 00:00:53,929 and a lead cross whose origin may stretch back 21 00:00:53,929 --> 00:00:56,473 to the days of the Knights Templar. 22 00:00:56,473 --> 00:01:00,894 To date, six men have died trying to solve the mystery. 23 00:01:01,937 --> 00:01:04,064 And, according to legend, 24 00:01:04,064 --> 00:01:07,150 one more will have to die 25 00:01:07,150 --> 00:01:10,862 before the treasure can be found. 26 00:01:14,533 --> 00:01:16,535 ♪ ♪ 27 00:01:30,841 --> 00:01:32,509 ‐RICK: The hope is, today, that... ‐CRAIG: Yeah. 28 00:01:32,509 --> 00:01:34,511 ...we find everything there was to find, 29 00:01:34,511 --> 00:01:38,140 ‐because the time, the window is closing. ‐Yeah, that'd be huge. 30 00:01:38,140 --> 00:01:40,767 Weather's closing. 31 00:01:40,767 --> 00:01:44,521 NARRATOR: After a year that saw the Laginas and their partners 32 00:01:44,521 --> 00:01:47,774 make a number of groundbreaking discoveries in their quest 33 00:01:47,774 --> 00:01:51,945 to solve a 225‐year‐old treasure mystery, 34 00:01:51,945 --> 00:01:56,283 Marty, Craig, Rick and members of their incredible team 35 00:01:56,283 --> 00:01:59,286 are nevertheless determined not to leave the island 36 00:01:59,286 --> 00:02:02,831 without making at least one more historic breakthrough. 37 00:02:02,831 --> 00:02:06,460 But to do so, they will have to work fast. 38 00:02:06,460 --> 00:02:09,796 It is already November, and only a matter of days 39 00:02:09,796 --> 00:02:13,425 until another harsh North Atlantic winter will force them 40 00:02:13,425 --> 00:02:15,636 to suspend all operations on the island 41 00:02:15,636 --> 00:02:17,304 for the rest of the year. 42 00:02:17,304 --> 00:02:21,266 Once November rolls around, your days are precious. 43 00:02:21,266 --> 00:02:25,729 So we need to accelerate this final location that we're on. 44 00:02:25,729 --> 00:02:28,440 ‐Gentlemen. ‐Morning, Craig. 45 00:02:28,440 --> 00:02:30,942 ‐Good morning, Craig. ‐So, what's the plan for the morning? 46 00:02:30,942 --> 00:02:33,195 Last night when we left, we had about 12 feet up in the can. 47 00:02:33,195 --> 00:02:34,738 So, when we come back this morning, 48 00:02:34,738 --> 00:02:36,657 we took the hammer grab out, and we measured it, 49 00:02:36,657 --> 00:02:39,242 ‐and it was at seven. ‐Oh, five‐foot move. 50 00:02:39,242 --> 00:02:41,536 ‐Good morning. Hi. ‐Pretty good news, eh? At least to start. 51 00:02:41,536 --> 00:02:44,456 JARDINE: Yeah. So, we'll know here in a minute if it's‐‐ 52 00:02:44,456 --> 00:02:45,874 hopefully, it's still loose. 53 00:02:45,874 --> 00:02:47,668 But the fact that it moved is great. 54 00:02:47,668 --> 00:02:48,919 Yeah. 55 00:02:48,919 --> 00:02:51,171 NARRATOR: One week ago, 56 00:02:51,171 --> 00:02:53,507 while digging in the eight‐foot‐wide shaft 57 00:02:53,507 --> 00:02:54,675 known as RF‐1... 58 00:02:54,675 --> 00:02:56,551 (metal screeching) 59 00:02:56,551 --> 00:02:58,762 ...a large mass, or object, 60 00:02:58,762 --> 00:03:01,390 became lodged inside the steel caisson 61 00:03:01,390 --> 00:03:04,685 at a depth of some 170 feet underground. 62 00:03:04,685 --> 00:03:06,478 JARED: Broke the whole shear off. 63 00:03:07,938 --> 00:03:09,940 Boy, it's disconcerting. 64 00:03:09,940 --> 00:03:13,402 NARRATOR: In order to dislodge it, 65 00:03:13,402 --> 00:03:15,821 the team from Irving Equipment Limited 66 00:03:15,821 --> 00:03:18,031 has spent the past few days resting 67 00:03:18,031 --> 00:03:21,702 the 26‐ton hammer grab tool on top of the obstruction, 68 00:03:21,702 --> 00:03:25,080 in the hopes that the sheer weight would push it forward 69 00:03:25,080 --> 00:03:27,958 so that it can be retrieved. 70 00:03:27,958 --> 00:03:31,962 We're hoping, when RF‐1 gets down to where we push 71 00:03:31,962 --> 00:03:33,713 the plug ahead in H8, 72 00:03:33,713 --> 00:03:35,549 we'll try and bring up what's in it. 73 00:03:35,549 --> 00:03:37,801 The one thing or maybe several one things. 74 00:03:37,801 --> 00:03:42,681 NARRATOR: Luckily, the team's strategy appears to have worked. 75 00:03:42,681 --> 00:03:46,059 But what was the nature of the large obstruction? 76 00:03:46,059 --> 00:03:49,187 Could it have been the legendary Chappell Vault, 77 00:03:49,187 --> 00:03:53,233 first reported by searchers in 1897? 78 00:03:53,233 --> 00:03:55,652 So, this is the one time when it would be good 79 00:03:55,652 --> 00:03:58,321 to see wood coming up in the spoils. 80 00:03:58,321 --> 00:04:01,408 RICK: If there really was a wood interface, 81 00:04:01,408 --> 00:04:03,869 at this depth, that would have to be the one thing. 82 00:04:03,869 --> 00:04:06,246 ‐Wow. ‐It would be that important. 83 00:04:06,246 --> 00:04:08,415 Yeah. 84 00:04:34,274 --> 00:04:39,613 NARRATOR: A void, nearly 200 feet deep in the Money Pit area? 85 00:04:39,613 --> 00:04:42,032 Is it possible that the large obstruction 86 00:04:42,032 --> 00:04:45,368 was once again pushed out of the way? 87 00:04:45,368 --> 00:04:47,537 MARTY: Where are we at, Vanessa? 88 00:04:47,537 --> 00:04:49,664 VANESSA: We are at 202, 89 00:04:49,664 --> 00:04:51,958 ‐but we definitely had a void. ‐Mm‐hmm. 90 00:04:51,958 --> 00:04:53,627 Full grabs each time, 91 00:04:53,627 --> 00:04:56,379 but for him to have only pulled up two grabs 92 00:04:56,379 --> 00:04:59,800 and us advance seven feet and we're still at the same marker? 93 00:04:59,800 --> 00:05:04,346 That means there's a void below that the material is going into. 94 00:05:04,346 --> 00:05:06,890 Well, this is good. Good job. 95 00:05:06,890 --> 00:05:09,142 All right, well... Hey, Rick! 96 00:05:10,477 --> 00:05:12,729 202. And guess what? 97 00:05:12,729 --> 00:05:14,648 There's definitely a void. 98 00:05:14,648 --> 00:05:15,941 Oh, wow. 99 00:05:17,317 --> 00:05:18,902 MARTY: Rick and I have always been 100 00:05:18,902 --> 00:05:21,947 really interested in that, because voids would be 101 00:05:21,947 --> 00:05:25,367 a strong indication of a man‐made tunnel. 102 00:05:25,367 --> 00:05:28,245 RICK: In the Money Pit, there are extensive tunnelings 103 00:05:28,245 --> 00:05:31,873 and/or voids created by the hand of man. 104 00:05:31,873 --> 00:05:34,209 So if it's a void, 105 00:05:34,209 --> 00:05:35,669 that's significant. 106 00:05:40,215 --> 00:05:41,424 JARDINE: That's the bucketfuls we like. 107 00:05:41,424 --> 00:05:43,051 CRAIG: That's a bucket. Yeah. 108 00:05:43,051 --> 00:05:45,303 We'll move right along with buckets like that. 109 00:05:45,303 --> 00:05:47,722 ‐JARDINE: It's all clay, though, isn't it? ‐GARY: Yeah. 110 00:05:47,722 --> 00:05:49,558 CRAIG: Some gravel. 111 00:05:49,558 --> 00:05:51,434 ‐Yeah. ‐The vast majority on the top 112 00:05:51,434 --> 00:05:53,186 ‐is the‐the gravel... ‐Yeah. 113 00:05:53,186 --> 00:05:54,855 ‐...or whatever material that... ‐Yeah. Yeah. 114 00:05:54,855 --> 00:05:56,731 JARDINE: And it's all crushed. 115 00:05:56,731 --> 00:05:59,109 ‐It's not natural materials from here. ‐CRAIG: No. 116 00:05:59,109 --> 00:06:02,320 I'm concerned the material on the backside of H8 117 00:06:02,320 --> 00:06:03,947 is falling down 118 00:06:03,947 --> 00:06:06,074 ‐into this hole. ‐JARDINE: Yeah. 119 00:06:06,074 --> 00:06:09,035 NARRATOR: Gravel, from nearby H8? 120 00:06:09,035 --> 00:06:12,581 Could it be the same gravel the team used last year 121 00:06:12,581 --> 00:06:14,958 to shore up a dangerous sinkhole in the ground 122 00:06:14,958 --> 00:06:17,586 beneath the drilling equipmen? 123 00:06:17,586 --> 00:06:20,422 ‐Hello. Hello. ‐Hey, Vanessa. 124 00:06:20,422 --> 00:06:22,382 ‐Well... ‐So, what do we think this is? 125 00:06:22,382 --> 00:06:24,885 CRAIG: This last hammer grab, to me, that's all that came up, 126 00:06:24,885 --> 00:06:26,887 was backfill material. 127 00:06:26,887 --> 00:06:28,555 Okay. 128 00:06:28,555 --> 00:06:31,808 If it's‐‐ It's got to be coming from H8, in my mind. 129 00:06:31,808 --> 00:06:34,102 I can't think of any other one. 130 00:06:34,102 --> 00:06:35,854 This looks serious. 131 00:06:35,854 --> 00:06:38,523 CRAIG: Yeah. That's the concern. 132 00:06:38,523 --> 00:06:40,984 That's what it looks like. The collapse, probably. 133 00:06:40,984 --> 00:06:42,485 ‐Um... ‐If it's falling down from H8 again, 134 00:06:42,485 --> 00:06:43,904 we may have the same problem. 135 00:06:43,904 --> 00:06:45,488 Obviously, this could mean another cave‐in, 136 00:06:45,488 --> 00:06:47,198 like happened last time. 137 00:06:47,198 --> 00:06:48,617 Where are we right now? 138 00:06:48,617 --> 00:06:50,619 So, we're eight inches below the can. 139 00:06:50,619 --> 00:06:54,623 So, that puts us at, like, 203 and two inches. 140 00:06:54,623 --> 00:06:58,793 What's happening underground in the Money Pit is dangerous. 141 00:06:58,793 --> 00:07:01,921 Material is moving and it's moving quite aggressively. 142 00:07:01,921 --> 00:07:04,132 Where are you in terms of a safety issue? 143 00:07:04,132 --> 00:07:06,426 Because safety has to be paramount. 144 00:07:06,426 --> 00:07:08,637 Yeah. So, what we're seeing, which is backfill 145 00:07:08,637 --> 00:07:11,598 from the shafts we've dug in the years past 146 00:07:11,598 --> 00:07:13,141 start coming up in the can. 147 00:07:13,141 --> 00:07:15,018 Obviously, whatever solution channel we're in, 148 00:07:15,018 --> 00:07:16,478 there's something moving 149 00:07:16,478 --> 00:07:18,355 that we're getting our own backfill back. 150 00:07:18,355 --> 00:07:19,773 That's concerning to me. 151 00:07:19,773 --> 00:07:21,232 That's kind of an all‐stop for me. 152 00:07:22,942 --> 00:07:25,070 Too much of a safety issue. 153 00:07:25,070 --> 00:07:28,114 I mean, you could start losing equipment and then, 154 00:07:28,114 --> 00:07:30,450 God forbid, people or anything. 155 00:07:30,450 --> 00:07:33,161 ‐So... ‐RICK: The bottom line is safety 156 00:07:33,161 --> 00:07:34,788 has to be the driver of this. 157 00:07:34,788 --> 00:07:36,331 And if you're concerned, 158 00:07:36,331 --> 00:07:39,626 now you have to be seriously concerned, right? 159 00:07:43,296 --> 00:07:48,009 I don't know. My‐my call would be... 160 00:07:48,009 --> 00:07:49,636 terminate the hole. 161 00:07:53,431 --> 00:07:56,059 NARRATOR: Despite the team's belief 162 00:07:56,059 --> 00:07:59,729 that a historic breakthrough may be just mere feet away, 163 00:07:59,729 --> 00:08:02,440 the dangerous condition beneath the drill rig 164 00:08:02,440 --> 00:08:04,693 has forced Rick, Marty and Craig 165 00:08:04,693 --> 00:08:08,822 to end their digging operations at the Money Pit site. 166 00:08:08,822 --> 00:08:12,409 MARTY: RF‐1 remains a very frustrating 167 00:08:12,409 --> 00:08:14,661 adventure for me, because we didn't get 168 00:08:14,661 --> 00:08:16,121 to the bottom ten feet. 169 00:08:17,580 --> 00:08:20,792 RICK: RF‐1 told me that 170 00:08:20,792 --> 00:08:22,544 there's a collapse feature in this area. 171 00:08:22,544 --> 00:08:26,005 Now, that demands further exploration. 172 00:08:26,005 --> 00:08:28,800 How we do that, I'm not certain. 173 00:08:28,800 --> 00:08:33,346 I'm grateful for you believing in it, for you believing in it. 174 00:08:33,346 --> 00:08:36,349 Not only you but your people and your companies. 175 00:08:36,349 --> 00:08:38,101 Thank you. Thank you. 176 00:08:38,101 --> 00:08:41,062 We appreciate all the hard work and all the effort, but... 177 00:08:41,062 --> 00:08:43,022 for now, we're done. 178 00:08:46,860 --> 00:08:48,987 NARRATOR: The following day... 179 00:08:48,987 --> 00:08:51,031 I'd like to get those stones out of here, maybe... 180 00:08:51,031 --> 00:08:53,074 NARRATOR: ...Rick and Marty decide to shift 181 00:08:53,074 --> 00:08:56,077 their team's attention to the massive stone‐paved formation 182 00:08:56,077 --> 00:08:58,371 that was recently discovered at the bottom 183 00:08:58,371 --> 00:09:00,290 of the triangle‐shaped swamp. 184 00:09:00,290 --> 00:09:02,375 Hey, Billy? You think you can get your bucket 185 00:09:02,375 --> 00:09:03,710 and pick up those stones? 186 00:09:03,710 --> 00:09:05,795 Yep. 187 00:09:05,795 --> 00:09:07,714 GARY: So, this is it, with the swamp? 188 00:09:07,714 --> 00:09:09,215 Yeah. 189 00:09:13,553 --> 00:09:16,514 ‐Oh, look. ‐JACK: What is that? 190 00:09:16,514 --> 00:09:18,475 NARRATOR: Within the past few weeks, 191 00:09:18,475 --> 00:09:20,852 the team has discovered a number of artifacts 192 00:09:20,852 --> 00:09:22,729 which support the theory 193 00:09:22,729 --> 00:09:25,565 that a large sailing ship, or galleon, was at one time 194 00:09:25,565 --> 00:09:29,736 sailed between what was once two separate islands; 195 00:09:29,736 --> 00:09:34,407 then, after a cofferdam was constructed, burned, sunk 196 00:09:34,407 --> 00:09:38,078 and then buried in what is now the Oak Island swamp. 197 00:09:38,078 --> 00:09:41,664 Even more intriguing is the fact that one of the features 198 00:09:41,664 --> 00:09:44,334 of the swamp is a circular stone construction 199 00:09:44,334 --> 00:09:46,377 known as the Eye of the Swamp, 200 00:09:46,377 --> 00:09:49,380 which geoscientist Dr. Ian Spooner believes 201 00:09:49,380 --> 00:09:52,509 could date back to the late 17th century. 202 00:09:52,509 --> 00:09:55,345 There's all kinds of data adding up in the swamp 203 00:09:55,345 --> 00:09:57,764 that that area was used for some sort of wharf, 204 00:09:57,764 --> 00:10:00,558 some sort of shipping, some sort of docking point. 205 00:10:00,558 --> 00:10:03,561 Maybe that's what the, uh, paved area is. 206 00:10:03,561 --> 00:10:05,605 I mean, it leads to all kinds of conjecture. 207 00:10:05,605 --> 00:10:08,942 And as Rick has pointed out many times, that's conjecture. 208 00:10:08,942 --> 00:10:11,444 But something happened here. 209 00:10:11,444 --> 00:10:13,446 RICK: Hold up a minute. 210 00:10:13,446 --> 00:10:14,531 We've got company. 211 00:10:14,531 --> 00:10:16,616 Doug and Dr. Spooner. 212 00:10:16,616 --> 00:10:18,576 ‐MARTY: Hey, guys. ‐Gentlemen. 213 00:10:18,576 --> 00:10:20,411 ‐RICK: Welcome back. ‐What you guys got going? 214 00:10:20,411 --> 00:10:23,957 (laughs) Well, so do you remember that squished stick, 215 00:10:23,957 --> 00:10:25,583 smashed by the rock? 216 00:10:25,583 --> 00:10:27,710 ‐Mm‐hmm. ‐We got the date. 217 00:10:27,710 --> 00:10:30,672 And so, we just got them back yesterday. 218 00:10:30,672 --> 00:10:32,423 The dates are rather extraordinary. 219 00:10:32,423 --> 00:10:33,842 We kind of rushed down here. 220 00:10:33,842 --> 00:10:36,136 It's gonna, I think, be important. 221 00:10:36,136 --> 00:10:40,431 NARRATOR: While investigating the stone‐paved area this year, 222 00:10:40,431 --> 00:10:42,475 Dr. Spooner discovered a number of tree branches 223 00:10:42,475 --> 00:10:45,478 embedded within the layers of rock. 224 00:10:45,478 --> 00:10:48,481 IAN: This stick will tell me when that stone was placed. 225 00:10:48,481 --> 00:10:51,317 If you date the stick, you know when that happened. 226 00:10:53,153 --> 00:10:56,865 So this is the paved area, which was 227 00:10:56,865 --> 00:11:00,160 a disturbed area, you know, disturbed by humans. 228 00:11:00,160 --> 00:11:01,369 Right. 229 00:11:01,369 --> 00:11:03,079 There's the dates we're getting. 230 00:11:03,079 --> 00:11:04,789 ‐Wow. ‐Yeah. 231 00:11:06,875 --> 00:11:08,501 ‐What are they? ‐Around... 232 00:11:08,501 --> 00:11:10,712 1200 AD. 233 00:11:10,712 --> 00:11:12,172 (laughter) 234 00:11:12,172 --> 00:11:14,966 ‐Medieval. ‐Medieval, baby! 235 00:11:14,966 --> 00:11:17,135 NARRATOR: 1200 AD? 236 00:11:17,135 --> 00:11:18,928 More than 800 years ago? 237 00:11:18,928 --> 00:11:21,639 And nearly six centuries before the Money Pit 238 00:11:21,639 --> 00:11:24,434 was discovered in 1795? 239 00:11:24,434 --> 00:11:27,604 ‐That's consistent with the first one. ‐That's for the paved area, yep. 240 00:11:27,604 --> 00:11:29,480 Well, to borrow an expression from Gary, 241 00:11:29,480 --> 00:11:31,399 I'm gobsmacked by this date, 242 00:11:31,399 --> 00:11:34,277 because I can't really fit that into anything. 243 00:11:34,277 --> 00:11:37,113 That's big, okay, but I don't know as I sit here 244 00:11:37,113 --> 00:11:38,615 right now what the heck to make of it. 245 00:11:38,615 --> 00:11:42,452 RICK: We now have two puzzles, i. e., 246 00:11:42,452 --> 00:11:45,079 we have a swamp story and a Money Pit story. 247 00:11:45,079 --> 00:11:47,415 I hope that they are related, but, boy, right now 248 00:11:47,415 --> 00:11:50,043 as we sit here, it's hard to put the two together. 249 00:11:50,043 --> 00:11:53,171 Unbelievable! That's what comes to mind‐‐ unbelievable. 250 00:11:53,171 --> 00:11:56,716 When we get this much data that's so awe‐inspiring 251 00:11:56,716 --> 00:11:58,885 and so difficult to digest, it's time to head for the war room. 252 00:11:58,885 --> 00:12:01,554 ‐Yeah. ‐And kick this around amongst the whole team. 253 00:12:01,554 --> 00:12:03,973 This was great, Dr. Spooner. 254 00:12:03,973 --> 00:12:05,391 ‐Thank you very much. ‐Oh, you're welcome. 255 00:12:05,391 --> 00:12:07,727 MARTY: Well, let's go figure it out. 256 00:12:15,193 --> 00:12:17,278 NARRATOR: The next day, and still excited 257 00:12:17,278 --> 00:12:20,406 by the results of Dr. Spooner's impressive research, 258 00:12:20,406 --> 00:12:23,910 Rick, Marty, Craig and the Oak Island team 259 00:12:23,910 --> 00:12:25,995 gather for what is, perhaps, 260 00:12:25,995 --> 00:12:28,581 this year's final meeting in the war room. 261 00:12:28,581 --> 00:12:31,125 ‐Hey, guys. ‐NARRATOR: As preparation for the meeting, 262 00:12:31,125 --> 00:12:34,003 Rick and Marty have also arranged for Charles Barkhouse 263 00:12:34,003 --> 00:12:36,589 to place this year's most significant finds‐‐ 264 00:12:36,589 --> 00:12:40,593 along with several others‐‐ in a kind of timeline, 265 00:12:40,593 --> 00:12:44,597 one which stretches all the way back to the 12th century. 266 00:12:44,597 --> 00:12:48,476 Quite an amazing display and we're gonna get into it 267 00:12:48,476 --> 00:12:50,979 in a little bit because we have a lot to discuss today. 268 00:12:50,979 --> 00:12:52,480 I want to thank Charles. 269 00:12:52,480 --> 00:12:54,649 Uh, Rick and I asked him to do this, 270 00:12:54,649 --> 00:12:57,318 to set these things up in this order, 271 00:12:57,318 --> 00:12:58,653 ‐sort of by year... ‐Yes. 272 00:12:58,653 --> 00:13:00,280 ...and that's obviously what you did. 273 00:13:00,280 --> 00:13:02,365 DAVE: By a hundred years. 274 00:13:02,365 --> 00:13:04,284 MARTY: Yeah, there's, that's just the point. 275 00:13:04,284 --> 00:13:05,493 Isn't it, Dave? 276 00:13:05,493 --> 00:13:06,869 Look how many years are here. 277 00:13:06,869 --> 00:13:09,289 DAVE: Way before 1795. 278 00:13:09,289 --> 00:13:11,749 ‐That's‐that's... ‐We're down here around 1100s. 279 00:13:11,749 --> 00:13:13,876 MARTY: The timeline puts it all in context, 280 00:13:13,876 --> 00:13:16,254 particularly regarding, if you look at 281 00:13:16,254 --> 00:13:19,048 to scale let's say, from 1795 to present 282 00:13:19,048 --> 00:13:22,635 is about this big, but from 1795 283 00:13:22,635 --> 00:13:25,513 back to where we're finding data is that big, 284 00:13:25,513 --> 00:13:27,640 so it's just amazing to see it 285 00:13:27,640 --> 00:13:29,309 spread out on the table like that. 286 00:13:29,309 --> 00:13:31,477 ‐Yeah. ‐I mean, when I came on this island 287 00:13:31,477 --> 00:13:35,231 with Rick, I thought there was a good chance 288 00:13:35,231 --> 00:13:38,026 that nothing would be found before this line. 289 00:13:38,026 --> 00:13:39,319 ‐DAVE: Right. ‐I really did. 290 00:13:39,319 --> 00:13:40,486 I thought perhaps that, 291 00:13:40,486 --> 00:13:43,823 you know, this is all just... 292 00:13:43,823 --> 00:13:45,366 ‐collective madness. ‐(laughter) 293 00:13:45,366 --> 00:13:47,035 But we have a lot of data here. 294 00:13:47,035 --> 00:13:48,661 RICK: The finds... 295 00:13:48,661 --> 00:13:50,413 I wish they could talk because 296 00:13:50,413 --> 00:13:52,665 there is certainly a story here. 297 00:13:52,665 --> 00:13:56,002 And the hope is that, as part of this process, 298 00:13:56,002 --> 00:13:59,297 we'll be able to mine some of that story 299 00:13:59,297 --> 00:14:02,008 and also see where we are in terms of the... 300 00:14:02,008 --> 00:14:03,676 the process, the search agenda, 301 00:14:03,676 --> 00:14:06,095 the investigation, unraveling the mystery. 302 00:14:06,095 --> 00:14:08,681 ‐Absolutely. ‐Yes. 303 00:14:08,681 --> 00:14:11,100 Well, the Dr. Spooner date of 1200 for the swamp. 304 00:14:11,100 --> 00:14:13,352 I mean, the cross... 305 00:14:13,352 --> 00:14:16,272 1300‐‐ are we really now surprised 306 00:14:16,272 --> 00:14:19,609 that Dr. Spooner dates the swamp back to 1200? 307 00:14:19,609 --> 00:14:21,402 ‐Yes. ‐Yes. ‐We've actually‐‐ 308 00:14:21,402 --> 00:14:23,362 I'm not, because we've got an artifact. 309 00:14:23,362 --> 00:14:25,531 ‐Yes. ‐And I feel like the Templars 310 00:14:25,531 --> 00:14:27,950 had something to do with Oak Island. 311 00:14:27,950 --> 00:14:30,536 This would have been a useful place for them and 312 00:14:30,536 --> 00:14:34,749 they might have seen it as a place to store some wealth. 313 00:14:34,749 --> 00:14:36,542 Yeah, we've got a date and we've got an artifact 314 00:14:36,542 --> 00:14:37,919 you can hold in your hand. 315 00:14:37,919 --> 00:14:40,254 And we have a massive paved area. 316 00:14:40,254 --> 00:14:41,964 The paved area is far bigger that what we've, 317 00:14:41,964 --> 00:14:43,883 I've even shown you guys, so, today... 318 00:14:43,883 --> 00:14:46,552 ‐Why‐why do you say that? ‐I can tell you now, 319 00:14:46,552 --> 00:14:48,429 based on just the strategic digs that we've done, 320 00:14:48,429 --> 00:14:50,389 the paved area, I checked before we came in here, 321 00:14:50,389 --> 00:14:52,725 is 80 by 170 feet. 322 00:14:52,725 --> 00:14:53,976 ‐Really? ‐Yeah. 323 00:14:53,976 --> 00:14:55,103 And when you connect the dots, 324 00:14:55,103 --> 00:14:57,605 they form an 80 by 170 foot, 325 00:14:57,605 --> 00:15:00,024 not a perfect rectangle, but... 326 00:15:00,024 --> 00:15:02,110 MARTY: Mm‐hmm, that's almost half an acre. 327 00:15:02,110 --> 00:15:04,403 That is just in, in a sense, isn't it? 328 00:15:04,403 --> 00:15:05,655 That data's just in. 329 00:15:05,655 --> 00:15:06,823 ‐I didn't know it was that big. ‐Mm‐hmm. 330 00:15:06,823 --> 00:15:09,075 I think it probably, uh... 331 00:15:09,075 --> 00:15:10,827 Dr. Ian Spooner said that there was an open channel. 332 00:15:10,827 --> 00:15:13,246 I think it probably, if you go back to the 1200s, 333 00:15:13,246 --> 00:15:14,956 it probably connects to that open channel. 334 00:15:14,956 --> 00:15:16,833 ‐Was an open channel. ‐Was an open channel. 335 00:15:16,833 --> 00:15:18,835 ‐Yeah. ‐LAIRD: What I enjoyed 336 00:15:18,835 --> 00:15:20,837 most about Ian Spooner and the, 337 00:15:20,837 --> 00:15:23,131 uh, paved area was the fact that he... 338 00:15:23,131 --> 00:15:26,050 was reluctant to play into the timeline. 339 00:15:26,050 --> 00:15:29,262 He‐he was kind of fighting it and fighting it, 340 00:15:29,262 --> 00:15:31,597 relying on the evidence, and this is what came 341 00:15:31,597 --> 00:15:33,850 out of the hard scientific evidence. 342 00:15:33,850 --> 00:15:37,061 ‐You buy it, too? ‐Uh, obviously, I don't think‐‐ 343 00:15:37,061 --> 00:15:38,771 ‐You can't dispute it. ‐No, I‐I'm asking, yeah. 344 00:15:38,771 --> 00:15:40,356 It's not disputable. 345 00:15:40,356 --> 00:15:41,774 ‐Wow. ‐And I would have‐‐ 346 00:15:41,774 --> 00:15:43,234 It's the last thing I would have expected 347 00:15:43,234 --> 00:15:45,278 ‐in the swamp. ‐Mm‐hmm. 348 00:15:45,278 --> 00:15:47,989 And to have him say it's‐it's man‐made... 349 00:15:47,989 --> 00:15:50,199 ‐was significant. ‐Not just him. 350 00:15:50,199 --> 00:15:52,285 ‐Yeah, yeah. ‐Also you, also him. 351 00:15:52,285 --> 00:15:54,370 ‐Yeah, yeah. ‐Yes. Yeah. 352 00:15:54,370 --> 00:15:56,122 ‐A whole bunch of experts. ‐TOM: You know, when we started 353 00:15:56,122 --> 00:15:57,623 this year, I mean, you weren't 354 00:15:57,623 --> 00:15:59,333 the biggest fan of the swamp. 355 00:15:59,333 --> 00:16:01,210 No, I'm still not, Tom, sorry. 356 00:16:01,210 --> 00:16:02,837 TOM: And I said, 357 00:16:02,837 --> 00:16:05,214 I said going in, I said, something happened there. 358 00:16:05,214 --> 00:16:07,133 Man had a hand in that swamp. 359 00:16:07,133 --> 00:16:09,302 You said, if there's something to be found, 360 00:16:09,302 --> 00:16:11,971 there's‐there's, uh, answers in the swamp. 361 00:16:11,971 --> 00:16:14,307 ‐Yeah, so what do you think now? ‐Yeah. 362 00:16:14,307 --> 00:16:16,058 At 1200, really? 363 00:16:16,058 --> 00:16:18,811 And‐and somebody as hard to move as Laird 364 00:16:18,811 --> 00:16:21,314 sitting over there saying, yeah, it's for sure, 365 00:16:21,314 --> 00:16:23,357 it's man‐made, everybody agrees, 366 00:16:23,357 --> 00:16:24,734 and there's twigs that date it to that. 367 00:16:24,734 --> 00:16:25,860 It's amazing. 368 00:16:25,860 --> 00:16:26,903 No, you were, you were right. 369 00:16:26,903 --> 00:16:28,404 Rick was right, um, there were, 370 00:16:28,404 --> 00:16:29,739 there were answers in the swamp. 371 00:16:29,739 --> 00:16:31,324 We just don't know what the questions are. 372 00:16:31,324 --> 00:16:32,617 We don't know what the question was. (laughs) 373 00:16:32,617 --> 00:16:33,993 Yeah. 374 00:16:33,993 --> 00:16:36,120 TOM: Well, you know, Dad spent 375 00:16:36,120 --> 00:16:37,997 a lot of time in that bog and I mean, you‐‐ 376 00:16:37,997 --> 00:16:41,083 you know, we probably found as much as he did 377 00:16:41,083 --> 00:16:43,586 in his years in there, but it's, you know, 378 00:16:43,586 --> 00:16:46,380 it's‐it's nice to see that it wasn't all for nothing. 379 00:16:46,380 --> 00:16:50,384 Maybe the Money Pit, you know, and the bog is tied in. 380 00:16:50,384 --> 00:16:51,969 I don't know, but there's, something 381 00:16:51,969 --> 00:16:53,846 ‐happened there a long time ago. ‐MARTY: Yeah. 382 00:16:53,846 --> 00:16:57,183 There's something about that bog that ties this‐‐ 383 00:16:57,183 --> 00:16:59,518 maybe this whole thing together. 384 00:17:03,856 --> 00:17:05,942 MARTY: Gary, there's quite a lot of things that we've been told 385 00:17:05,942 --> 00:17:07,652 can be used in tunneling. 386 00:17:07,652 --> 00:17:09,028 Do you think there might've been tunneling 387 00:17:09,028 --> 00:17:10,863 outside of the Money Pit area? 388 00:17:10,863 --> 00:17:12,031 Yeah, I do. 389 00:17:12,031 --> 00:17:13,699 I mean, why would we be finding 390 00:17:13,699 --> 00:17:16,744 picks at the back of the swamp. 391 00:17:16,744 --> 00:17:19,705 These swages on Lot 21. 392 00:17:19,705 --> 00:17:22,166 Yeah, it's possible that 393 00:17:22,166 --> 00:17:24,252 tunneling could have been done in other parts 394 00:17:24,252 --> 00:17:26,504 ‐of the island. ‐Yep. 395 00:17:26,504 --> 00:17:30,591 Now look at that‐‐ that is a really old pick! 396 00:17:30,591 --> 00:17:33,386 NARRATOR: For generations, treasure hunters have believed 397 00:17:33,386 --> 00:17:35,346 that an elaborate tunneling system 398 00:17:35,346 --> 00:17:38,057 exists deep below Oak Island. 399 00:17:38,057 --> 00:17:41,477 This year, in addition to finding an 18th century 400 00:17:41,477 --> 00:17:44,564 pickax near the so‐called Eye of the Swamp... 401 00:17:44,564 --> 00:17:46,107 Feel how heavy that is, Rick. 402 00:17:46,107 --> 00:17:48,776 ‐Wow! Wow! ‐(laughing) 403 00:17:48,776 --> 00:17:50,403 ...the team found two metal swages, 404 00:17:50,403 --> 00:17:54,031 which were used to sharpen tunneling tools. 405 00:17:54,031 --> 00:17:57,535 They also found an iron chisel on property 406 00:17:57,535 --> 00:18:00,204 which once belonged to Daniel McGinnis, 407 00:18:00,204 --> 00:18:02,373 one of the three young men who first 408 00:18:02,373 --> 00:18:06,210 discovered the original Money Pit in 1795. 409 00:18:11,090 --> 00:18:13,426 ‐Wow. ‐NARRATOR: Even more incredible 410 00:18:13,426 --> 00:18:16,887 is the fact that these objects were dated to be as much 411 00:18:16,887 --> 00:18:20,099 as 600 years old. 412 00:18:20,099 --> 00:18:24,186 To me, the most significant finds are the tools. 413 00:18:24,186 --> 00:18:28,774 These are the tools of the trade of the people that was working 414 00:18:28,774 --> 00:18:31,235 on Oak Island, from the swages, 415 00:18:31,235 --> 00:18:33,237 the hand‐point chisel, 416 00:18:33,237 --> 00:18:35,615 even these things that we're not sure what they are. 417 00:18:35,615 --> 00:18:38,117 I mean, we're finally pushing 418 00:18:38,117 --> 00:18:41,704 this story back so far, much further back than I thought. 419 00:18:41,704 --> 00:18:44,248 I thought it was, like, a pirate operation. 420 00:18:44,248 --> 00:18:49,462 Now look at these tools going back to the 14 and 1500s. 421 00:18:49,462 --> 00:18:50,755 The problem is the dates don't match up with that. 422 00:18:50,755 --> 00:18:52,256 The paved area, you say, 423 00:18:52,256 --> 00:18:53,633 is 1200s to 1400s, these are... 424 00:18:53,633 --> 00:18:55,343 They‐they could be that old, I suppose. 425 00:18:55,343 --> 00:18:58,429 Mm‐hmm, they match up more with the Eye of the Swamp. 426 00:18:58,429 --> 00:18:59,805 ‐Yeah. ‐Which they're calling 427 00:18:59,805 --> 00:19:01,265 ‐late 1600s, which is still... ‐Right. 428 00:19:01,265 --> 00:19:03,809 ‐...long before this timeline. ‐Right. 429 00:19:03,809 --> 00:19:06,437 JACK: We know during specific dates, 430 00:19:06,437 --> 00:19:08,397 large amounts of work went on on Oak Island 431 00:19:08,397 --> 00:19:11,484 in at least two different clumps of time. 432 00:19:11,484 --> 00:19:13,152 You know, you've got the 1600s, 433 00:19:13,152 --> 00:19:15,154 which it fits with the Rosicrucians 434 00:19:15,154 --> 00:19:16,864 and the Francis Bacon theories. 435 00:19:16,864 --> 00:19:19,992 You've got the 11 to 1400s, 436 00:19:19,992 --> 00:19:22,995 which fits right in with the Templar theories. 437 00:19:22,995 --> 00:19:24,872 ‐Yes. ‐And... 438 00:19:24,872 --> 00:19:27,708 we have dendro information from the slipway 439 00:19:27,708 --> 00:19:30,795 that someone was there doing a lot of work 440 00:19:30,795 --> 00:19:34,006 ‐before searchers. ‐That's right. 441 00:19:34,006 --> 00:19:38,177 NARRATOR: After installing a 6,000‐square‐foot extension 442 00:19:38,177 --> 00:19:40,137 or "bump out" to the steel cofferdam 443 00:19:40,137 --> 00:19:42,473 surrounding Smith's Cove, 444 00:19:42,473 --> 00:19:45,685 the team unearthed a massive log structure 445 00:19:45,685 --> 00:19:47,353 while looking for the end of the slipway 446 00:19:47,353 --> 00:19:49,146 that they discovered last yea, 447 00:19:49,146 --> 00:19:52,983 and which was dated to 1769. 448 00:19:52,983 --> 00:19:55,986 Incredibly, after using dendrochronology, 449 00:19:55,986 --> 00:19:57,863 or tree‐ring dating, 450 00:19:57,863 --> 00:20:01,701 this new structure was found to be significantly older. 451 00:20:01,701 --> 00:20:04,370 It's a little head scratcher. 452 00:20:04,370 --> 00:20:05,871 Uh‐oh. 453 00:20:05,871 --> 00:20:07,123 1741. 454 00:20:07,123 --> 00:20:08,541 Whoa! 455 00:20:08,541 --> 00:20:10,876 (laughter) 456 00:20:13,754 --> 00:20:16,382 CRAIG: That significant structure 457 00:20:16,382 --> 00:20:18,551 was being used for quite a long time. 458 00:20:18,551 --> 00:20:22,346 Was it for finding this treasure? I don't know. 459 00:20:22,346 --> 00:20:25,057 Um, it could have been but, you know, 460 00:20:25,057 --> 00:20:28,477 once the searchers started, that we call searchers, 461 00:20:28,477 --> 00:20:31,021 I don't think any of them found it because, you know, 462 00:20:31,021 --> 00:20:32,523 there's no record of anybody 463 00:20:32,523 --> 00:20:33,816 ‐becoming rich. ‐MARTY: No, no. 464 00:20:33,816 --> 00:20:35,943 ‐Not a great treasure, yeah. ‐OTHERS: Yes. 465 00:20:35,943 --> 00:20:40,364 All of this changes the mystery as we know it, though, 466 00:20:40,364 --> 00:20:43,701 because it was supposed to be an uninhabited island... 467 00:20:43,701 --> 00:20:47,413 ‐Yeah. ‐...in 1795, when the treasure hunt began as we know it. 468 00:20:47,413 --> 00:20:49,832 But this has shown us that there was a story, 469 00:20:49,832 --> 00:20:52,084 and there was activity going on here much earlier. 470 00:20:52,084 --> 00:20:55,254 And on possibly a very continual basis, 471 00:20:55,254 --> 00:20:58,090 whether it's the same group or not. 472 00:20:58,090 --> 00:21:00,092 And as Craig remarked a little earlier, 473 00:21:00,092 --> 00:21:04,722 ‐there's a lot converging on the late 1600s. ‐CRAIG: In that area. 474 00:21:04,722 --> 00:21:07,558 I think, looking at the artifacts that are here 475 00:21:07,558 --> 00:21:10,269 and the dates that are, are given, 476 00:21:10,269 --> 00:21:11,771 I think there isn't a theorist out there 477 00:21:11,771 --> 00:21:13,063 that isn't gonna be happy with 478 00:21:13,063 --> 00:21:14,899 what we have on the table here now. 479 00:21:14,899 --> 00:21:16,942 Everybody's gonna see something that they, uh‐‐ 480 00:21:16,942 --> 00:21:18,778 pertains to their theory. 481 00:21:18,778 --> 00:21:20,905 You know, I think that's probably right. 482 00:21:20,905 --> 00:21:22,573 Y‐You look back here 483 00:21:22,573 --> 00:21:26,160 at earlier Templar theories. 484 00:21:26,160 --> 00:21:28,579 We've got dates that come back to the 1300s. 485 00:21:28,579 --> 00:21:31,957 We have an artifact that is 1300, 486 00:21:31,957 --> 00:21:36,587 or possibly even earlier that linked back to France and Dome. 487 00:21:36,587 --> 00:21:40,633 The thoughts about, uh, Nolan's Cross and the‐the swamp. 488 00:21:40,633 --> 00:21:43,010 I mean, something happened in the swamp. 489 00:21:43,010 --> 00:21:44,637 Yes. 490 00:21:44,637 --> 00:21:46,764 DOUG: We have empirical evidence of that now, 491 00:21:46,764 --> 00:21:49,058 and we have science that is dated 492 00:21:49,058 --> 00:21:51,310 to the time period in which it occurred. 493 00:21:51,310 --> 00:21:53,521 MARTY: So the prevailing theories, 494 00:21:53,521 --> 00:21:56,106 they've all been enhanced by this, in a sense. 495 00:21:56,106 --> 00:21:58,275 I would say more or less, Marty, yes. 496 00:21:58,275 --> 00:22:00,653 Yeah. And a lot of those theories 497 00:22:00,653 --> 00:22:03,322 rely on inscribed stones. 498 00:22:03,322 --> 00:22:05,491 We've got a hand‐point chisel, and it could have been used 499 00:22:05,491 --> 00:22:08,077 for inscribing on a lot of those stones. 500 00:22:08,077 --> 00:22:09,787 ‐Yes. ‐Yeah. 501 00:22:09,787 --> 00:22:12,623 By the way, I have something in my pocket... 502 00:22:12,623 --> 00:22:14,667 (chuckling) Oh, I know what this is. 503 00:22:14,667 --> 00:22:16,168 Yeah, you do. 504 00:22:16,168 --> 00:22:18,504 That also is‐‐ actually tells quite a story. 505 00:22:18,504 --> 00:22:21,173 But‐but this happened... 506 00:22:21,173 --> 00:22:22,299 And it belongs at that end of the table. 507 00:22:22,299 --> 00:22:23,759 MARTY: It belongs way over there, yeah. 508 00:22:30,766 --> 00:22:32,560 This is a... 509 00:22:32,560 --> 00:22:35,813 a rather ordinary toonie. 510 00:22:35,813 --> 00:22:38,774 But guess what. That's my toonie. 511 00:22:38,774 --> 00:22:41,902 That's the one I put down H8. 512 00:22:41,902 --> 00:22:44,238 NARRATOR: Two years ago, 513 00:22:44,238 --> 00:22:48,158 after drilling a six‐inch‐wide borehole known as H8, 514 00:22:48,158 --> 00:22:51,453 the Oak Island team made a number of shocking discoveries 515 00:22:51,453 --> 00:22:54,290 that included ancient pottery, 516 00:22:54,290 --> 00:22:57,293 pieces of parchment and leather bookbinding, 517 00:22:57,293 --> 00:23:00,713 and 17th century human bones. 518 00:23:00,713 --> 00:23:03,716 Believing that they may have finally found 519 00:23:03,716 --> 00:23:06,260 the original Money Pit, but concerned that the contents 520 00:23:06,260 --> 00:23:09,597 of the fabled treasure vault may have drifted over time, 521 00:23:09,597 --> 00:23:13,309 Marty Lagina decided to try an experiment. 522 00:23:13,309 --> 00:23:16,145 MARTY: Here's the test: are we gonna find this or not, right? 523 00:23:16,145 --> 00:23:17,813 NARRATOR: Into the six‐inch‐wide borehole, 524 00:23:17,813 --> 00:23:20,107 he tossed a $2 Canadian coin, 525 00:23:20,107 --> 00:23:23,903 otherwise known as a "toonie." 526 00:23:23,903 --> 00:23:27,323 He was hoping that if he ever located the coin 527 00:23:27,323 --> 00:23:30,075 during a future dig, he would be able to see 528 00:23:30,075 --> 00:23:33,913 if it had drifted, and if so, by how much. 529 00:23:33,913 --> 00:23:36,457 (beeping) 530 00:23:36,457 --> 00:23:39,501 ‐(whines) ‐Just there. 531 00:23:39,501 --> 00:23:42,588 NARRATOR: Incredibly, one week ago, while searching spoils 532 00:23:42,588 --> 00:23:45,382 retrieved from over 200 feet deep 533 00:23:45,382 --> 00:23:47,843 in the nearby RF‐1 shaft, 534 00:23:47,843 --> 00:23:50,596 Marty and Gary found the coin. 535 00:23:50,596 --> 00:23:53,223 Hey, did you hear that little clink? 536 00:23:54,683 --> 00:23:56,602 Ooh, it's a coin! 537 00:23:59,563 --> 00:24:03,609 Oh! Frickin' modern toonie! 538 00:24:03,609 --> 00:24:05,486 Geez. 539 00:24:05,486 --> 00:24:07,196 Not in very good condition, either. 540 00:24:07,196 --> 00:24:09,073 Put it in your pocket. 541 00:24:09,073 --> 00:24:10,699 Not what we're looking for. 542 00:24:10,699 --> 00:24:12,284 Keep going. 543 00:24:20,042 --> 00:24:21,293 Hey, Gary, wait a minute. 544 00:24:21,293 --> 00:24:23,837 Let me see that. Let me see that toonie. 545 00:24:23,837 --> 00:24:26,799 ‐Oh, the toonie. ‐Yeah. 546 00:24:26,799 --> 00:24:28,300 It's modern, mate. 547 00:24:28,300 --> 00:24:30,970 I know. Let me see it. I'm having a thought. 548 00:24:36,183 --> 00:24:38,394 GARY: It's not old. 549 00:24:38,394 --> 00:24:40,062 Yeah, but, Gary, this has been in the dirt 550 00:24:40,062 --> 00:24:41,647 for quite some time. 551 00:24:44,191 --> 00:24:47,653 Look how it's encrusted with it. 552 00:24:47,653 --> 00:24:51,031 I think me and that toonie have been acquainted before. 553 00:24:51,031 --> 00:24:53,409 ‐Is that...? ‐That's my toonie, buddy. 554 00:24:55,411 --> 00:24:58,914 If you think about the center of that plastic pipe 555 00:24:58,914 --> 00:25:02,042 to the center of RF‐1 is probably what? 556 00:25:02,042 --> 00:25:04,670 ‐Probably ten feet? ‐Probably ten feet, so that toonie 557 00:25:04,670 --> 00:25:08,674 traveled ten feet underground in that solution channel. 558 00:25:08,674 --> 00:25:11,677 It could have made that distance in a day. Literally. 559 00:25:11,677 --> 00:25:14,388 It could have fallen out the bottom when I dropped it, 560 00:25:14,388 --> 00:25:16,390 and that's why we didn't find it. In fact, 561 00:25:16,390 --> 00:25:19,059 it's likely it traveled the first year, right? 562 00:25:19,059 --> 00:25:21,979 ‐Yeah. ‐Or we probably should have got it. 563 00:25:21,979 --> 00:25:25,065 So, I mean, that's proof positive 564 00:25:25,065 --> 00:25:28,444 that metal objects, at least, can move quite readily. 565 00:25:28,444 --> 00:25:30,571 Rick was saying, "I wish these things could talk." 566 00:25:30,571 --> 00:25:32,740 That one's talking. 567 00:25:32,740 --> 00:25:35,743 NARRATOR: Could the discovery of Marty's toonie 568 00:25:35,743 --> 00:25:38,245 in the spoils recovered from RF‐1 569 00:25:38,245 --> 00:25:42,082 be evidence that the original contents of H8 570 00:25:42,082 --> 00:25:44,877 could have, like the elusive Chappell Vault, 571 00:25:44,877 --> 00:25:47,546 been swept not only deeper underground, 572 00:25:47,546 --> 00:25:50,382 but also several feet away? 573 00:25:50,382 --> 00:25:54,136 It's for sure that stuff is moving around horizontally 574 00:25:54,136 --> 00:25:55,554 as well as vertically. 575 00:25:55,554 --> 00:25:58,474 Well, that's good because it might explain why 576 00:25:58,474 --> 00:26:01,060 nobody's been able to find this elusive treasure. 577 00:26:01,060 --> 00:26:04,897 It's bad because it explains why no one's been able to find 578 00:26:04,897 --> 00:26:07,733 this elusive treasure; it's gonna be difficult. 579 00:26:07,733 --> 00:26:09,985 So if there is a treasure, 580 00:26:09,985 --> 00:26:13,739 now, how far could this treasure have possibly moved? 581 00:26:13,739 --> 00:26:16,533 TERRY: With all of the activities and tunnels 582 00:26:16,533 --> 00:26:18,035 and shafts and the water movement, 583 00:26:18,035 --> 00:26:19,912 it could very definitely drop down. 584 00:26:19,912 --> 00:26:23,499 The density of gold is 19 times greater than water. 585 00:26:23,499 --> 00:26:26,376 It has a specific gravity of 19 and some‐‐ and change. 586 00:26:26,376 --> 00:26:28,712 Well, that would drop straight down to the bottom 587 00:26:28,712 --> 00:26:30,089 of that Money Pit. 588 00:26:30,089 --> 00:26:32,132 And I'm not surprised that there might be 589 00:26:32,132 --> 00:26:33,092 a vertical movement. 590 00:26:33,092 --> 00:26:34,843 But to have eight feet of‐‐ 591 00:26:34,843 --> 00:26:36,428 ‐Was it eight, or...? ‐At least. 592 00:26:36,428 --> 00:26:39,598 ‐CHARLES: Ten. ‐Ten feet of lateral movement, 593 00:26:39,598 --> 00:26:41,934 that speaks to currents down there. 594 00:26:41,934 --> 00:26:43,727 So with all of the... 595 00:26:43,727 --> 00:26:45,938 banging and pumping that's gone on through the years, 596 00:26:45,938 --> 00:26:50,234 the Money Pit area is nothing like what it would have been 597 00:26:50,234 --> 00:26:52,111 at the time of any potential emplacement. 598 00:26:52,111 --> 00:26:53,946 DOUG: We were looking for signs of a deep collapse 599 00:26:53,946 --> 00:26:56,990 in what we believed to be the original Money Pit area. 600 00:26:56,990 --> 00:26:59,535 We found signs of deep collapse. 601 00:26:59,535 --> 00:27:01,954 And we've always looked above 160 feet, basically. 602 00:27:01,954 --> 00:27:05,415 Now we know we have to move deeper. 603 00:27:05,415 --> 00:27:07,668 Well, we have to think of this in context of something 604 00:27:07,668 --> 00:27:10,170 having been here once, and then maybe 605 00:27:10,170 --> 00:27:11,463 recovery efforts when you see all this. 606 00:27:11,463 --> 00:27:14,174 And maybe recovery successes. 607 00:27:14,174 --> 00:27:15,968 So having framed it that way, 608 00:27:15,968 --> 00:27:17,886 does the fellowship still think that 609 00:27:17,886 --> 00:27:19,930 there's something here to find? 610 00:27:24,643 --> 00:27:26,728 Yes. Definitely. 611 00:27:26,728 --> 00:27:28,730 ‐Yeah. ‐Yeah. 612 00:27:28,730 --> 00:27:30,566 Does everybody? 613 00:27:30,566 --> 00:27:33,485 ‐I do. ‐CHARLES: Yes. Absolutely. 614 00:27:33,485 --> 00:27:35,571 I agree with Doug. I think we‐we have 615 00:27:35,571 --> 00:27:38,699 ‐a new mystery here to discover. ‐Yes, we do. 616 00:27:38,699 --> 00:27:40,742 But yes, there's treasure here. 617 00:27:40,742 --> 00:27:43,161 You just haven't found it yet, but it's here. 618 00:27:43,161 --> 00:27:45,831 DAVE: I think it's still here. 619 00:27:45,831 --> 00:27:48,500 Dad thought that there was something here. I believed him. 620 00:27:48,500 --> 00:27:50,627 ‐Okay. ‐And I still do. 621 00:27:50,627 --> 00:27:52,671 Like Charles, we haven't looked in the right spot. 622 00:27:52,671 --> 00:27:54,089 Well, that I'm sure of. 623 00:27:54,089 --> 00:27:55,716 We're running out of real estate, though, 624 00:27:55,716 --> 00:27:57,759 ‐in some places. ‐(laughter) 625 00:27:57,759 --> 00:27:59,845 ‐And perhaps money and time and... ‐Yeah, yeah. 626 00:27:59,845 --> 00:28:01,889 Well, based on some of the things 627 00:28:01,889 --> 00:28:05,017 we've uncovered in the swamp this year‐‐ 628 00:28:05,017 --> 00:28:07,352 I mean, I know it's all about treasure. 629 00:28:07,352 --> 00:28:10,397 ‐Gold. Spendables, Dave. ‐That's right. 630 00:28:10,397 --> 00:28:13,525 But how do you put a price on something 631 00:28:13,525 --> 00:28:17,112 that might change history, or rewrite a bit of history? 632 00:28:17,112 --> 00:28:18,780 Because this stuff is old. 633 00:28:18,780 --> 00:28:21,867 I mean, it's‐it's just‐‐ it shouldn't be there. 634 00:28:23,201 --> 00:28:27,623 You know, my dad spent almost a lifetime here 635 00:28:27,623 --> 00:28:30,083 looking for this thing, whatever it is. 636 00:28:30,083 --> 00:28:32,210 And‐and so did Dan. 637 00:28:32,210 --> 00:28:35,422 So for their sake, I'd like to think 638 00:28:35,422 --> 00:28:38,008 that there is still a treasure here to be found. 639 00:28:38,008 --> 00:28:40,427 Right. 640 00:28:40,427 --> 00:28:41,678 MARTY: I can see Laird thinking 641 00:28:41,678 --> 00:28:43,221 from here‐‐ he's thinking. He's thinking, 642 00:28:43,221 --> 00:28:45,182 ‐"What am I gonna say?" ‐"Oh, no, it's my turn." 643 00:28:45,182 --> 00:28:46,308 MARTY (laughs): Yeah. 644 00:28:46,308 --> 00:28:48,268 LAIRD: Well, 645 00:28:48,268 --> 00:28:51,897 if we look at the science and the archaeology, um... 646 00:28:51,897 --> 00:28:53,690 something happened. 647 00:28:53,690 --> 00:28:56,568 We have hard scientific evidence for that. 648 00:28:56,568 --> 00:28:58,570 Whether it involves treasure, I couldn't say. 649 00:28:58,570 --> 00:29:02,366 Um, but something significant happened, and... 650 00:29:02,366 --> 00:29:05,953 it's really, it seems to be worth pursuing. 651 00:29:05,953 --> 00:29:08,747 It's obviously worth pursuing. 652 00:29:08,747 --> 00:29:11,291 Dan Henskee, what's your thoughts? 653 00:29:11,291 --> 00:29:13,293 Is there treasure still here? 654 00:29:13,293 --> 00:29:15,295 And of course, I can't say definitively 655 00:29:15,295 --> 00:29:17,297 one way or the other. 656 00:29:17,297 --> 00:29:18,840 If you had to put an odds on it? 657 00:29:18,840 --> 00:29:21,426 I'm an odd guy but not an odds guy. 658 00:29:21,426 --> 00:29:24,012 (laughter) 659 00:29:24,012 --> 00:29:25,806 MARTY: How about, let me try it this way. 660 00:29:25,806 --> 00:29:27,933 Is it worth continuing to search? 661 00:29:27,933 --> 00:29:30,102 Well, the‐the sneaky way out is to say, 662 00:29:30,102 --> 00:29:32,771 just to be able to get together is worth it, 663 00:29:32,771 --> 00:29:34,856 even if we don't find the treasure. 664 00:29:34,856 --> 00:29:37,818 ‐MARTY: All right, I can live with that. ‐TERRY: That's a good one. 665 00:29:37,818 --> 00:29:39,486 Yeah. 666 00:29:39,486 --> 00:29:40,821 MARTY: So... 667 00:29:40,821 --> 00:29:42,864 is there a great treasure here? 668 00:29:42,864 --> 00:29:46,576 Uh, I think there's a good chance there was. 669 00:29:46,576 --> 00:29:49,162 Because... because there's a lot of stuff. 670 00:29:49,162 --> 00:29:50,872 You know, I can't help it‐‐ I'm a numbers guy. 671 00:29:50,872 --> 00:29:53,667 Maybe, like, 40% that there was something here, 672 00:29:53,667 --> 00:29:56,628 and maybe half that that it's still here. 673 00:29:56,628 --> 00:29:59,172 But that's way farther than I ever was before. 674 00:29:59,172 --> 00:30:02,300 My leading theory when I first came on this island is that 675 00:30:02,300 --> 00:30:04,261 it was just collective madness. 676 00:30:04,261 --> 00:30:06,304 So there‐‐ that's where I'm at. 677 00:30:06,304 --> 00:30:08,098 ‐It's still... ‐DAVE: Well, you can't disagree 678 00:30:08,098 --> 00:30:10,308 ‐with what's in front of you, Marty. ‐Yeah, but I don't see treasure 679 00:30:10,308 --> 00:30:13,311 ‐in front of me, Dave. ‐No, I agree with you 100% on that‐‐ I don't, either. 680 00:30:13,311 --> 00:30:14,896 (chuckles): Right. Exactly. 681 00:30:17,357 --> 00:30:21,403 To me, it says a huge amount of work was done on the island. 682 00:30:21,403 --> 00:30:24,322 And then you take this little block from 11 to 1400. 683 00:30:24,322 --> 00:30:26,324 You want a "aha moment"? 684 00:30:26,324 --> 00:30:27,826 Well, there's your "aha moment." 685 00:30:27,826 --> 00:30:29,161 It doesn't speak to treasure. 686 00:30:29,161 --> 00:30:33,040 These, in their totality, to me, speak to treasure 687 00:30:33,040 --> 00:30:35,333 or some activity, which was conducted 688 00:30:35,333 --> 00:30:37,627 to hide some sort of secret. 689 00:30:37,627 --> 00:30:42,299 But this, this is your "stand up and take notice." 690 00:30:42,299 --> 00:30:44,217 This is amazing. 691 00:30:44,217 --> 00:30:46,928 ‐Yes. ‐That's where I'm at. 692 00:30:46,928 --> 00:30:50,182 It's one thing to look at the dates by century‐‐ 693 00:30:50,182 --> 00:30:52,517 1100, 1200, 1300, 1400. 694 00:30:52,517 --> 00:30:55,687 But think about what happened during those centuries. 695 00:30:55,687 --> 00:30:58,982 Context it with all the things that have gone on in the world. 696 00:30:58,982 --> 00:31:02,778 It's quite amazing to think that some of these activities 697 00:31:02,778 --> 00:31:06,615 that we believe have happened here on the island 698 00:31:06,615 --> 00:31:09,451 were during the Crusades to the time of Charlemagne. 699 00:31:09,451 --> 00:31:13,747 From Templars to world‐shattering events 700 00:31:13,747 --> 00:31:14,873 across the globe. 701 00:31:14,873 --> 00:31:17,584 Certainly, on the continent. 702 00:31:17,584 --> 00:31:20,212 On this tiny little island, long ago, 703 00:31:20,212 --> 00:31:24,257 during the time of wonderment, in terms of history. 704 00:31:24,257 --> 00:31:27,552 Something happened here on this tiny little place. 705 00:31:27,552 --> 00:31:30,889 So, having said all that, 706 00:31:30,889 --> 00:31:33,100 are there opportunities to advance the search 707 00:31:33,100 --> 00:31:34,559 and/or move the dial, 708 00:31:34,559 --> 00:31:37,896 because I've always said that the story here 709 00:31:37,896 --> 00:31:40,732 is remarkable and, and it deserves an ending. 710 00:31:40,732 --> 00:31:43,735 Well, this is gonna shock you, but... 711 00:31:43,735 --> 00:31:46,863 ‐(all chuckle) ‐Great. Super. 712 00:31:46,863 --> 00:31:49,574 I think, like Laird said, 713 00:31:49,574 --> 00:31:52,786 the potential for the paved area to be man‐made 714 00:31:52,786 --> 00:31:55,831 in the swamp and date back to the 12 to 1400s... 715 00:31:55,831 --> 00:31:58,083 if we're going to do something in the swamp, 716 00:31:58,083 --> 00:31:59,417 that's a no‐brainer. 717 00:31:59,417 --> 00:32:00,919 Looking for a smoking gun, 718 00:32:00,919 --> 00:32:03,922 actually confirming that that is what we think it might be, 719 00:32:03,922 --> 00:32:07,509 ‐is potentially a big discovery. ‐Yeah. 720 00:32:07,509 --> 00:32:08,927 GARY: Because if you're gonna find something, 721 00:32:08,927 --> 00:32:13,598 it's gonna be from a paved area towards the ocean 722 00:32:13,598 --> 00:32:15,433 along the side of the island, 723 00:32:15,433 --> 00:32:17,561 'cause that's where you would have had to load 724 00:32:17,561 --> 00:32:19,146 or unload things. 725 00:32:19,146 --> 00:32:21,523 And that's gonna be the hardest part of the swamp to get into. 726 00:32:21,523 --> 00:32:23,358 Because it is deep there. 727 00:32:23,358 --> 00:32:25,902 So, if there's something there, maybe that's why it's there. 728 00:32:25,902 --> 00:32:27,988 ‐Yes. ‐Yeah. ‐Yeah. 729 00:32:27,988 --> 00:32:29,990 But this whole thing started with the Money Pit. 730 00:32:29,990 --> 00:32:31,616 Without the Money Pit, 731 00:32:31,616 --> 00:32:34,161 all of this doesn't say there's treasure here. 732 00:32:34,161 --> 00:32:36,288 ‐Yes. ‐BILLY: Right. To me, 733 00:32:36,288 --> 00:32:37,455 if you don't do it, I'm coming down 734 00:32:37,455 --> 00:32:39,416 ‐on the weekends to... ‐(laughter) 735 00:32:39,416 --> 00:32:41,209 ...to finish. 736 00:32:41,209 --> 00:32:43,295 GARY: And it's only this year that I've realized, you know, 737 00:32:43,295 --> 00:32:46,631 seeing that toonie, we're chasing it. 738 00:32:46,631 --> 00:32:48,258 The treasure in the Money Pit, 739 00:32:48,258 --> 00:32:52,012 we're just tantalizingly close every time. 740 00:32:52,012 --> 00:32:54,139 MARTY: Yeah, but you know what? 741 00:32:54,139 --> 00:32:56,641 I think I already know if we proceed in the Money Pit, 742 00:32:56,641 --> 00:32:57,893 it's not gonna be cheap. 743 00:32:57,893 --> 00:32:59,144 Yeah. 744 00:33:04,316 --> 00:33:06,818 MARTY: You know, the next step in the Money Pit, 745 00:33:06,818 --> 00:33:09,362 if we are really considering a big dig, 746 00:33:09,362 --> 00:33:12,616 is not just millions, it's tens of millions. 747 00:33:12,616 --> 00:33:13,658 Mm‐hmm. 748 00:33:13,658 --> 00:33:18,205 So, that's a‐a very sobering number. 749 00:33:18,205 --> 00:33:21,625 And with our new discovery of your coin, 750 00:33:21,625 --> 00:33:23,668 ‐you're kind of questioning... ‐MARTY: Mm‐hmm. 751 00:33:23,668 --> 00:33:25,128 I hate to hear myself say this. 752 00:33:25,128 --> 00:33:27,672 The coin argues a bit towards the big dig. 753 00:33:27,672 --> 00:33:30,008 How quick can we do it? 754 00:33:30,008 --> 00:33:31,801 It could take as long as three years. 755 00:33:31,801 --> 00:33:33,011 (exhales) 756 00:33:33,011 --> 00:33:35,347 RICK: But that's quite a commitment. 757 00:33:35,347 --> 00:33:37,807 That's not something you enter into halfheartedly. 758 00:33:37,807 --> 00:33:40,518 You set foot on that field, you better bring your pads. 759 00:33:40,518 --> 00:33:41,853 And you better buckle up. 760 00:33:41,853 --> 00:33:45,357 NARRATOR: Over the past decade, 761 00:33:45,357 --> 00:33:46,942 the Laginas and their partners 762 00:33:46,942 --> 00:33:49,152 have researched a number of methods that would allow them 763 00:33:49,152 --> 00:33:52,322 to excavate a 100‐foot‐wide area of the Money Pit 764 00:33:52,322 --> 00:33:56,785 down to a depth of some 250 feet. 765 00:33:56,785 --> 00:33:59,120 One of these methods would involve constructing 766 00:33:59,120 --> 00:34:01,164 a massive concrete shaft 767 00:34:01,164 --> 00:34:03,166 around the entire Money Pit area, 768 00:34:03,166 --> 00:34:05,210 so that access to the vault 769 00:34:05,210 --> 00:34:07,504 would be unhampered by flooding. 770 00:34:07,504 --> 00:34:11,716 Another, also known as the "freeze ring method," 771 00:34:11,716 --> 00:34:15,220 would involve digging dozens of 250‐foot‐deep boreholes 772 00:34:15,220 --> 00:34:18,223 in a giant 100‐foot‐wide circle. 773 00:34:18,223 --> 00:34:21,893 The holes would then be filled with a chemical such as glycol 774 00:34:21,893 --> 00:34:23,603 that would literally freeze the ground 775 00:34:23,603 --> 00:34:28,066 and allow for an unfettered excavation. 776 00:34:28,066 --> 00:34:31,236 The "big dig" has been kind of hanging out there 777 00:34:31,236 --> 00:34:33,113 for a long time. You know, 778 00:34:33,113 --> 00:34:36,199 it's almost kind of a... like a child's dream. 779 00:34:36,199 --> 00:34:39,786 The science is relatively simple. 780 00:34:39,786 --> 00:34:42,247 It's just basically trying to make a solid ring 781 00:34:42,247 --> 00:34:45,583 around the Money Pit, and then plug the bottom of it, 782 00:34:45,583 --> 00:34:47,294 and then excavate that. 783 00:34:47,294 --> 00:34:51,381 RICK: It's enormously expensive from a financial, 784 00:34:51,381 --> 00:34:53,466 commitment of time and resources, 785 00:34:53,466 --> 00:34:55,677 but you know, at the end of the day, 786 00:34:55,677 --> 00:34:57,929 if you dig an 80‐foot or a 100‐foot‐diameter circle, 787 00:34:57,929 --> 00:35:01,391 we all believe that we know, within that 788 00:35:01,391 --> 00:35:03,435 resides the original Money Pit. 789 00:35:03,435 --> 00:35:06,021 I think it's ultimately the only way 790 00:35:06,021 --> 00:35:08,773 to really get to the bottom of what happened here 791 00:35:08,773 --> 00:35:09,858 on Oak Island. 792 00:35:09,858 --> 00:35:13,320 This is no small adventure 793 00:35:13,320 --> 00:35:15,947 we're on at this point, given, given this. 794 00:35:15,947 --> 00:35:19,242 It's quite a story laid out here before us, 795 00:35:19,242 --> 00:35:21,995 and I think I've always felt it goes beyond treasure, 796 00:35:21,995 --> 00:35:24,456 the recovery of spendables. 797 00:35:24,456 --> 00:35:26,541 Would that be a cool thing? Yeah. Absolutely. 798 00:35:26,541 --> 00:35:29,085 But it's beyond that now. 799 00:35:29,085 --> 00:35:32,005 To me, this is a bloody success. This is fantastic. 800 00:35:32,005 --> 00:35:35,258 These are artifacts going back to the Middle Ages. 801 00:35:35,258 --> 00:35:37,385 And we're talking about Oak Island! 802 00:35:37,385 --> 00:35:40,263 ‐(laughter) ‐I think Gary wants to stay. 803 00:35:40,263 --> 00:35:42,265 Yeah, I do. I'm not leaving. 804 00:35:42,265 --> 00:35:45,143 ‐(laughter) ‐MARTY: I‐I think 805 00:35:45,143 --> 00:35:47,979 I will, uh, propose we close this meeting 806 00:35:47,979 --> 00:35:49,522 of the Fellowship of the Dig. 807 00:35:49,522 --> 00:35:52,651 And thanks to all. Respect to all. 808 00:35:52,651 --> 00:35:54,819 It's been a good run. Let's see what the future brings. 809 00:35:54,819 --> 00:35:56,821 ‐RICK: Cheers to everybody. ‐MARTY: Hear, hear. 810 00:35:56,821 --> 00:35:58,823 ‐RICK: Thank you. ‐TERRY: You're very welcome. 811 00:35:58,823 --> 00:36:00,992 NARRATOR: Following their meeting in the war room, 812 00:36:00,992 --> 00:36:03,536 and before they depart the island 813 00:36:03,536 --> 00:36:05,330 for the long winter... 814 00:36:05,330 --> 00:36:08,667 the Laginas and their team have gathered 815 00:36:08,667 --> 00:36:11,795 at the 10‐X drill site to pay tribute 816 00:36:11,795 --> 00:36:15,048 to their late friend and partner, Dan Blankenship. 817 00:36:16,675 --> 00:36:20,970 Okay, we're all here in honor of Dan Blankenship 818 00:36:20,970 --> 00:36:23,473 and the island, of course, was a big part of Dan. 819 00:36:23,473 --> 00:36:25,517 Dan is a big part of all our lives. 820 00:36:25,517 --> 00:36:28,520 Rick did this beautiful plaque, 821 00:36:28,520 --> 00:36:31,398 and it's all made from, basically, the island. 822 00:36:33,149 --> 00:36:35,860 NARRATOR: Along with Dan's son, Dave Blankenship, 823 00:36:35,860 --> 00:36:37,946 and daughter, Linda Flowers, 824 00:36:37,946 --> 00:36:40,365 they have placed Dan's old drilling rig 825 00:36:40,365 --> 00:36:42,200 as a memorial to him, 826 00:36:42,200 --> 00:36:44,160 at the site of what Dan considered 827 00:36:44,160 --> 00:36:46,371 his greatest breakthrough in the 50 years 828 00:36:46,371 --> 00:36:49,958 he tirelessly worked to solve the Oak Island mystery: 829 00:36:49,958 --> 00:36:52,544 Borehole 10‐X. 830 00:36:52,544 --> 00:36:55,714 It's the end of the year, and before we completely 831 00:36:55,714 --> 00:36:57,882 close things up here on the island, 832 00:36:57,882 --> 00:37:01,553 we felt that it was appropriate to honor Dan 833 00:37:01,553 --> 00:37:05,348 for the work that he did on the island for 50 years. 834 00:37:05,348 --> 00:37:08,184 Dan Blankenship led the way in a lot of ways. 835 00:37:08,184 --> 00:37:10,019 It's a measure of respect. 836 00:37:10,019 --> 00:37:12,564 RICK: It's built out of rock from the island, 837 00:37:12,564 --> 00:37:14,774 pipe from his drill program. 838 00:37:14,774 --> 00:37:18,069 It just seemed like appropriate 839 00:37:18,069 --> 00:37:19,904 to honor his memory in that way. 840 00:37:19,904 --> 00:37:23,074 I think it's, uh, 841 00:37:23,074 --> 00:37:25,535 borrow from Lincoln, "altogether fitting and proper" 842 00:37:25,535 --> 00:37:27,328 that we do this little ceremony. 843 00:37:27,328 --> 00:37:30,206 And I don't think he would've wanted a whole bunch of words 844 00:37:30,206 --> 00:37:34,252 here today, because he wasn't that sort of guy. 845 00:37:34,252 --> 00:37:35,754 ‐Uh, I think he would... ‐Few, few words. 846 00:37:35,754 --> 00:37:36,921 Few words, yeah. 847 00:37:36,921 --> 00:37:39,924 Dan was a big part of our lives, uh, for, 848 00:37:39,924 --> 00:37:41,843 gosh, the last 15 years or so. 849 00:37:41,843 --> 00:37:43,762 I mean, the first role he played, 850 00:37:43,762 --> 00:37:45,930 he was sort of this enigmatic, 851 00:37:45,930 --> 00:37:48,475 you know, almost like a superhero 852 00:37:48,475 --> 00:37:52,812 to Rick and I years ago when we'd read about things. 853 00:37:52,812 --> 00:37:56,441 RICK: We came to appreciate him on so many levels. 854 00:37:56,441 --> 00:37:58,777 You know. A friend, a partner, 855 00:37:58,777 --> 00:38:00,904 but it was, it was more than that. 856 00:38:00,904 --> 00:38:03,740 We call ourselves a family here, 857 00:38:03,740 --> 00:38:06,910 because at the end of the day, you know, 858 00:38:06,910 --> 00:38:08,953 that's what this is about. 859 00:38:08,953 --> 00:38:11,748 I would think that my father would feel like 860 00:38:11,748 --> 00:38:13,416 we are all family. 861 00:38:13,416 --> 00:38:15,502 We're the Oak Island family right now. 862 00:38:15,502 --> 00:38:17,170 I think he would be happy. 863 00:38:17,170 --> 00:38:19,798 It's a happy day today to see this plaque 864 00:38:19,798 --> 00:38:22,759 and to know that he's gonna be remembered. 865 00:38:22,759 --> 00:38:26,805 Hopefully, when people visit the island in the future, 866 00:38:26,805 --> 00:38:28,640 they will look at that sign 867 00:38:28,640 --> 00:38:31,351 and remember the man, the individual. 868 00:38:31,351 --> 00:38:34,687 A very unique, one‐of‐a‐kind individual 869 00:38:34,687 --> 00:38:36,523 that will leave a lasting legacy here 870 00:38:36,523 --> 00:38:41,194 on Oak Island and‐and indeed, in all of our lives. 871 00:38:41,194 --> 00:38:44,239 So, for that we thank him and we thank you. 872 00:38:44,239 --> 00:38:45,615 Like I always say, Rick, there's a right way, 873 00:38:45,615 --> 00:38:47,492 the wrong way, and there's Dad's way. 874 00:38:47,492 --> 00:38:48,701 ‐There you go. ‐(all chuckling) 875 00:38:48,701 --> 00:38:50,286 We‐we kind of learned that. 876 00:38:50,286 --> 00:38:51,871 ‐(laughter) ‐MARTY: We are treading 877 00:38:51,871 --> 00:38:54,165 in Dan's footsteps in the sense that 878 00:38:54,165 --> 00:38:57,293 he went after the same things we did. 879 00:38:57,293 --> 00:39:00,505 Where his footsteps seem prudent, 880 00:39:00,505 --> 00:39:02,799 we're trying to follow and extend them. 881 00:39:02,799 --> 00:39:05,969 It's been a great year. Thanks for all the hard work. 882 00:39:05,969 --> 00:39:08,513 RICK: But for Dan, I really thought this year 883 00:39:08,513 --> 00:39:10,515 we'd have Dan's breakthrough. 884 00:39:10,515 --> 00:39:13,476 Well, we didn't. We didn't do that, 885 00:39:13,476 --> 00:39:16,271 but we, we sure have come up with a lot of information. 886 00:39:16,271 --> 00:39:21,025 NARRATOR: In a year that saw some of the most amazing discoveries 887 00:39:21,025 --> 00:39:22,527 ever made... 888 00:39:22,527 --> 00:39:27,031 from medieval tools and artifacts 889 00:39:27,031 --> 00:39:30,618 to incredible new evidence that something of great value 890 00:39:30,618 --> 00:39:33,371 could very well lie buried in the fabled Money Pit, 891 00:39:33,371 --> 00:39:37,208 in addition to extensive man‐made structures 892 00:39:37,208 --> 00:39:41,337 in the swamp, dating back as much as eight centuries... 893 00:39:41,337 --> 00:39:43,381 Billy! Come on, man. Give me a hug. 894 00:39:43,381 --> 00:39:45,508 NARRATOR: ...Rick, Marty and Craig 895 00:39:45,508 --> 00:39:49,012 have not only validated more than a decade of hard work 896 00:39:49,012 --> 00:39:51,222 and personal sacrifices... 897 00:39:51,222 --> 00:39:54,893 ‐Oh, Henskee. ‐Oh, my God, you're too strong. 898 00:39:54,893 --> 00:39:57,228 NARRATOR: ...they have now come closer than ever 899 00:39:57,228 --> 00:39:58,897 to revealing the truth behind Oak Island's 900 00:39:58,897 --> 00:40:00,398 incredible mystery. 901 00:40:00,398 --> 00:40:03,234 Charles, my man. Keep the faith. 902 00:40:03,234 --> 00:40:06,571 ‐I know you will. ‐CHARLES: I never lost it. I never will. 903 00:40:06,571 --> 00:40:09,449 NARRATOR: Theirs is a story that will surely change history 904 00:40:09,449 --> 00:40:10,867 as we know it, 905 00:40:10,867 --> 00:40:13,786 just as it has changed their lives, 906 00:40:13,786 --> 00:40:17,707 and the lives of everyone around them forever. 907 00:40:17,707 --> 00:40:20,501 MARTY: You know, 1200 AD? 908 00:40:20,501 --> 00:40:23,212 (chuckling): People working in a swamp on Oak Island? 909 00:40:23,212 --> 00:40:24,756 It's crazy. 910 00:40:24,756 --> 00:40:27,467 RICK: There's a wonderful story written here. 911 00:40:27,467 --> 00:40:29,260 I've always wanted to turn the last page 912 00:40:29,260 --> 00:40:33,765 on Oak Island, and, uh, it's certainly not there yet. 913 00:40:33,765 --> 00:40:37,560 We're but chapters in, after all this time. 914 00:40:37,560 --> 00:40:41,272 ‐We're just beginning. (laughs) ‐Oh, yeah. 915 00:40:45,818 --> 00:40:48,905 CAPTIONING PROVIDED BY A+E NETWORKS 75499

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