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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:01,128 --> 00:00:03,796 Tonight on The Curse of Oak Island... 2 00:00:03,832 --> 00:00:06,359 Are you ready to put some coil to the soil, mate? 3 00:00:06,360 --> 00:00:07,699 - I’m ready. - Let’s go for it. 4 00:00:07,700 --> 00:00:09,227 Oh, what have we got here? 5 00:00:09,228 --> 00:00:12,212 - Oh, yeah. - Ooh! Look at that, mate. 6 00:00:12,237 --> 00:00:13,708 - Is that something? - Wow. 7 00:00:13,832 --> 00:00:15,095 That is spectacular. 8 00:00:15,096 --> 00:00:18,032 - Why does it have these angles? - Does it cry "ship"? 9 00:00:18,060 --> 00:00:19,663 It could easily be part of a ship. 10 00:00:19,664 --> 00:00:21,059 Well, how about that? 11 00:00:21,060 --> 00:00:23,125 - Hey, Craig! - I think they might have it. 12 00:00:23,126 --> 00:00:24,861 - There it is. - Oh! 13 00:00:24,862 --> 00:00:26,399 What the...? Check that out! 14 00:00:26,400 --> 00:00:29,763 That’s a phenomenon right there. 15 00:00:30,862 --> 00:00:34,531 There is an island in the North Atlantic 16 00:00:34,532 --> 00:00:37,399 where people have been looking for 17 00:00:37,400 --> 00:00:41,399 an incredible treasure for more than 200 years. 18 00:00:41,400 --> 00:00:43,927 So far, they have found a stone slab 19 00:00:43,928 --> 00:00:47,159 with strange symbols carved into it... 20 00:00:47,400 --> 00:00:50,399 man-made workings that date to medieval times, 21 00:00:50,400 --> 00:00:55,663 and a lead cross whose origin may be connected 22 00:00:55,664 --> 00:00:56,729 to the Knights Templar. 23 00:00:56,730 --> 00:00:59,125 To date, six men have died 24 00:00:59,126 --> 00:01:01,663 trying to solve the mystery. 25 00:01:01,664 --> 00:01:07,059 And according to legend, one more will have to die 26 00:01:07,060 --> 00:01:11,730 before the treasure can be found. 27 00:01:22,126 --> 00:01:24,795 A-13 is underway. 28 00:01:24,796 --> 00:01:28,927 Hoping to connect into the same structure that gave us 29 00:01:28,928 --> 00:01:30,465 - all that compressed air. - Yep. 30 00:01:30,466 --> 00:01:32,399 An especially hopeful day 31 00:01:32,400 --> 00:01:33,927 has begun on Oak Island 32 00:01:33,928 --> 00:01:36,399 for brothers Rick and Marty Lagina, 33 00:01:36,400 --> 00:01:38,125 their partner Craig Tester 34 00:01:38,126 --> 00:01:40,125 and members of their team as they 35 00:01:40,126 --> 00:01:43,399 begin drilling a borehole known as A-13. 36 00:01:43,400 --> 00:01:44,729 Game on, Charles. 37 00:01:44,730 --> 00:01:45,894 - Game on. - A chamber 38 00:01:45,895 --> 00:01:48,399 - could lay beneath. - It is their belief 39 00:01:48,400 --> 00:01:50,531 that they may be within striking distance 40 00:01:50,532 --> 00:01:53,059 of something that has eluded searchers 41 00:01:53,060 --> 00:01:55,597 for 227 years: 42 00:01:55,598 --> 00:01:59,531 the legendary Money Pit treasure vault. 43 00:01:59,532 --> 00:02:01,531 That was good. 44 00:02:01,532 --> 00:02:04,894 We are very close to where we started 45 00:02:04,895 --> 00:02:09,059 to get all that air eruption from what we thought was 46 00:02:09,060 --> 00:02:10,498 a subterranean chamber. 47 00:02:10,499 --> 00:02:14,465 - I-I think it’s got to be a chamber or something. - Sure. 48 00:02:14,466 --> 00:02:15,531 Something man-made. 49 00:02:15,532 --> 00:02:16,729 It’s quite possible. 50 00:02:16,730 --> 00:02:17,664 But the only way we’re gonna 51 00:02:17,665 --> 00:02:20,399 find out, we drill down and get to it. 52 00:02:20,400 --> 00:02:21,729 Yeah. 53 00:02:21,730 --> 00:02:24,795 So, what we’ve got here on the screen... 54 00:02:24,796 --> 00:02:26,059 These, I’m almost very certain 55 00:02:26,060 --> 00:02:28,663 that they are some sort of a tunnel. 56 00:02:28,664 --> 00:02:29,927 Interesting. 57 00:02:29,928 --> 00:02:31,465 One week ago, 58 00:02:31,466 --> 00:02:33,059 geophysicist Jeremy Church 59 00:02:33,060 --> 00:02:34,531 presented the team 60 00:02:34,532 --> 00:02:35,159 with seismic data... 61 00:02:35,160 --> 00:02:36,531 So, if we go right in... 62 00:02:36,532 --> 00:02:39,465 That revealed a possible underground tunnel 63 00:02:39,466 --> 00:02:40,795 extending through the area 64 00:02:40,796 --> 00:02:43,993 that the team has dubbed the C-1 cluster. 65 00:02:43,994 --> 00:02:45,795 It has to be from some sort 66 00:02:45,796 --> 00:02:46,730 of human activity. 67 00:02:46,731 --> 00:02:48,059 It has been in this same area 68 00:02:48,060 --> 00:02:52,125 that they recently detected evidence of both silver and gold 69 00:02:52,126 --> 00:02:54,125 in numerous boreholes. 70 00:02:54,126 --> 00:02:55,399 The other thing is 71 00:02:55,400 --> 00:02:59,125 this low-density cave-type feature right here. 72 00:02:59,126 --> 00:03:00,927 I call it "the structure." 73 00:03:00,928 --> 00:03:03,059 However, Jeremy also noted 74 00:03:03,060 --> 00:03:05,399 a second compelling discovery. 75 00:03:05,400 --> 00:03:08,663 What size is that structure? Just approximately. 76 00:03:08,664 --> 00:03:11,664 12 feet by 12 feet tops. 77 00:03:13,466 --> 00:03:15,399 Oh! Oh! 78 00:03:15,400 --> 00:03:17,465 - Oh! - Holy cow. 79 00:03:17,466 --> 00:03:18,597 We’ve never seen that before. 80 00:03:18,598 --> 00:03:19,663 - That’s unusual. - Blowing water up. 81 00:03:19,664 --> 00:03:23,465 When the team drilled a borehole known as AB-13 82 00:03:23,466 --> 00:03:25,795 in the hopes of locating the structure... 83 00:03:25,796 --> 00:03:29,399 - Oh, boy. -NARRATOR: at a depth of some 60 feet, 84 00:03:29,400 --> 00:03:30,993 massive amounts of air 85 00:03:30,994 --> 00:03:34,663 suddenly began shooting up to the surface. 86 00:03:34,664 --> 00:03:35,795 Okay, guys. 87 00:03:35,796 --> 00:03:37,927 - Explain the air to me. - Okay, so, 88 00:03:37,928 --> 00:03:40,795 one thing’s for sure: there’s a cavity. 89 00:03:40,796 --> 00:03:43,498 The mysterious burst of air 90 00:03:43,499 --> 00:03:45,663 offered evidence of something Marty Lagina 91 00:03:45,664 --> 00:03:47,630 has long suspected. 92 00:03:47,631 --> 00:03:49,894 And this same phenomenon would occur 93 00:03:49,895 --> 00:03:52,993 - for the famous offset chamber, wouldn’t it? - Exactly. 94 00:03:52,994 --> 00:03:55,059 - A - so-called offset chamber 95 00:03:55,060 --> 00:03:58,320 constructed away from the original Money Pit 96 00:03:58,364 --> 00:04:01,693 where the elusive treasure vault has been safely hidden 97 00:04:01,694 --> 00:04:05,232 for more than two centuries. 98 00:04:05,496 --> 00:04:06,759 We got a core coming. 99 00:04:06,760 --> 00:04:11,231 Now as the team drills Borehole A-13 100 00:04:11,232 --> 00:04:14,099 just two and a half feet to the north... 101 00:04:14,100 --> 00:04:14,760 48. 102 00:04:14,761 --> 00:04:17,099 - 48. - Thank you. 103 00:04:17,100 --> 00:04:20,231 If they can penetrate the mysterious void 104 00:04:20,232 --> 00:04:22,099 or chamber once again 105 00:04:22,100 --> 00:04:23,363 and recover evidence 106 00:04:23,364 --> 00:04:25,165 of anything valuable inside of it, 107 00:04:25,166 --> 00:04:29,495 they will dig a massive ten-foot-wide steel-cased shaft 108 00:04:29,496 --> 00:04:34,297 in an effort to finally solve the Oak Island mystery. 109 00:04:34,298 --> 00:04:37,297 The presence of air trapped underground 110 00:04:37,298 --> 00:04:39,363 at relatively shallow depths 111 00:04:39,364 --> 00:04:43,495 indicates some sort of cavity, cavern. 112 00:04:43,496 --> 00:04:44,627 Something that can trap air. 113 00:04:44,628 --> 00:04:47,561 So, that’s kind of what we’re looking for. 114 00:04:47,562 --> 00:04:48,430 We’re getting loose already. 115 00:04:48,431 --> 00:04:49,561 I wonder if it’s gonna be loose enough 116 00:04:49,562 --> 00:04:52,760 for us to run into a chamber or a cavern. 117 00:04:53,298 --> 00:04:54,429 What it merits is 118 00:04:54,430 --> 00:04:56,825 some delineation, some more drilling 119 00:04:56,826 --> 00:05:00,495 around this air pocket to see what the heck it is. 120 00:05:00,496 --> 00:05:02,561 Mother Nature’s finest. 121 00:05:02,562 --> 00:05:04,759 That’s how loose I want to see it. 122 00:05:04,760 --> 00:05:09,759 Is that just indication we’re close to a chamber? 123 00:05:09,760 --> 00:05:12,165 Well, if there’s an opening, 124 00:05:12,166 --> 00:05:14,627 that opening is partially full of air, 125 00:05:14,628 --> 00:05:15,496 partially full of water. 126 00:05:15,497 --> 00:05:18,099 And that looseness that’s created 127 00:05:18,100 --> 00:05:19,594 is gonna soften everything up 128 00:05:19,595 --> 00:05:21,099 and make everything all the more saturated 129 00:05:21,100 --> 00:05:25,165 - and could lead to a chamber or a cavern. - Okay. 130 00:05:25,166 --> 00:05:28,495 Next two or three cores will tell the tale. 131 00:05:28,496 --> 00:05:30,099 All right. Continue on. 132 00:05:30,100 --> 00:05:34,231 While the drilling operation continues at the Money Pit... 133 00:05:34,232 --> 00:05:37,495 There’s the first spicy meatball coming up. 134 00:05:37,496 --> 00:05:41,231 Near the southern edge of the triangle-shaped swamp... 135 00:05:41,232 --> 00:05:43,363 - We should pull up some interesting stuff. - Yeah. 136 00:05:43,364 --> 00:05:45,825 We’ll, uh, we’ll get in there with you and keep an eye out. 137 00:05:45,826 --> 00:05:48,099 Metal detection expert Gary Drayton 138 00:05:48,100 --> 00:05:52,099 along with Rick and Marty’s nephews Peter and David Fornetti 139 00:05:52,100 --> 00:05:55,693 search alongside heavy equipment operator Billy Gerhardt 140 00:05:55,694 --> 00:06:00,495 for important clues that may lie buried in the muck and mud. 141 00:06:00,496 --> 00:06:01,693 This is, like, the... 142 00:06:01,694 --> 00:06:05,495 the main triangle of activity in the swamp. 143 00:06:05,496 --> 00:06:09,462 I’m hoping that Billy and this long-range excavator 144 00:06:09,463 --> 00:06:12,165 is the difference this year in this area. 145 00:06:12,166 --> 00:06:14,759 - Mm-hmm. - And that’s what we’re doing. 146 00:06:14,760 --> 00:06:16,363 Getting boggy with it. 147 00:06:17,628 --> 00:06:19,627 Over the past several years, 148 00:06:19,628 --> 00:06:22,759 while searching this area, which is just west 149 00:06:22,760 --> 00:06:25,363 of the potentially ancient stone ship’s wharf, 150 00:06:25,364 --> 00:06:27,759 the team has discovered compelling evidence 151 00:06:27,760 --> 00:06:30,627 that the swamp was not only man-made 152 00:06:30,628 --> 00:06:32,231 but ingeniously designed 153 00:06:32,232 --> 00:06:34,495 to hide something of great importance 154 00:06:34,496 --> 00:06:36,165 and possible value. 155 00:06:36,166 --> 00:06:40,363 These include pieces of wooden cargo barrels, 156 00:06:40,364 --> 00:06:43,363 fragments of a ship 157 00:06:43,364 --> 00:06:44,759 and even seismic data 158 00:06:44,760 --> 00:06:47,759 that identified a 200-foot-long object 159 00:06:47,760 --> 00:06:49,627 resembling the size and shape 160 00:06:49,628 --> 00:06:51,627 of an ancient treasure galleon. 161 00:06:51,628 --> 00:06:54,099 Every time we do dig, 162 00:06:54,100 --> 00:06:55,100 we find things. 163 00:06:55,101 --> 00:06:56,363 We found the stone road. 164 00:06:56,364 --> 00:06:57,495 We found the stone path. 165 00:06:57,496 --> 00:07:01,759 We’re now digging in the edge of the swamp road, 166 00:07:01,760 --> 00:07:03,726 and we’re finding artifacts. 167 00:07:03,727 --> 00:07:06,363 We can start putting the puzzle pieces together, 168 00:07:06,364 --> 00:07:10,495 and hopefully, we’ll finally, once and for all, 169 00:07:10,496 --> 00:07:13,231 understand what happened in the swamp. 170 00:07:13,232 --> 00:07:14,627 What’ve you got, Pete? 171 00:07:14,628 --> 00:07:18,430 - Is that something? - Oh, yeah. 172 00:07:18,760 --> 00:07:21,627 Wow, that is spectacular. 173 00:07:21,628 --> 00:07:24,759 Definitely an unusual-shaped piece. 174 00:07:24,760 --> 00:07:26,561 No idea what it is. 175 00:07:26,562 --> 00:07:29,231 Perhaps part of a tabletop. 176 00:07:29,232 --> 00:07:33,363 And look, you can see where this has been beveled a little bit. 177 00:07:33,364 --> 00:07:35,429 This was... Had a specific use. 178 00:07:35,430 --> 00:07:39,099 You’d assume that something like this would have been 179 00:07:39,100 --> 00:07:40,297 maybe inside a ship. 180 00:07:40,298 --> 00:07:42,099 - Yeah. - Not part of an outside. 181 00:07:42,100 --> 00:07:45,462 But very, very cool piece. 182 00:07:45,463 --> 00:07:46,495 I love the shape. 183 00:07:46,496 --> 00:07:49,693 There’s a trapezoid piece of wood from the swamp 184 00:07:49,694 --> 00:07:54,297 that’s absolutely, positively, clearly shaped by human hands. 185 00:07:54,298 --> 00:07:55,495 There’s no doubt. 186 00:07:55,496 --> 00:07:56,430 Who knows what it was, 187 00:07:56,431 --> 00:07:58,231 but it might have been from a bigger ship. 188 00:07:58,232 --> 00:07:59,495 We need to test this thing. 189 00:07:59,496 --> 00:08:02,099 I’m convinced something happened here. 190 00:08:02,100 --> 00:08:04,297 Something pretty big. 191 00:08:04,298 --> 00:08:09,430 So, this is just another piece that corroborates that. 192 00:08:12,496 --> 00:08:15,759 Piece just came out of the bucket there that’s cut. 193 00:08:15,760 --> 00:08:17,859 Oh, yeah, I see it. 194 00:08:20,496 --> 00:08:22,496 Good eye, Billy. 195 00:08:23,760 --> 00:08:26,495 Yeah, it’s tough to tell whether it’s a piece 196 00:08:26,496 --> 00:08:28,759 of planking. I... 197 00:08:28,760 --> 00:08:30,231 If it was a barrel stave, 198 00:08:30,232 --> 00:08:32,495 it would be more curved but... 199 00:08:32,496 --> 00:08:35,099 Could have been like an oar or a paddle. 200 00:08:35,100 --> 00:08:38,363 Part of an oar? Could it be connected 201 00:08:38,364 --> 00:08:41,165 to ancient ship-related activity 202 00:08:41,166 --> 00:08:42,495 and offer more evidence 203 00:08:42,496 --> 00:08:45,495 that the swamp was once an open harbor? 204 00:08:45,496 --> 00:08:48,627 - Another one for the collection, for sure. - Yeah. 205 00:08:48,628 --> 00:08:49,628 Good eye, Billy. 206 00:08:49,629 --> 00:08:51,099 We’ll put it with the rest 207 00:08:51,100 --> 00:08:53,231 - of the interesting wood. - Sounds good. 208 00:08:53,232 --> 00:08:54,759 Here we go. Next bucket up. 209 00:08:54,760 --> 00:08:59,331 As the investigation continues at the swamp... 210 00:09:00,232 --> 00:09:01,627 How we doing? 211 00:09:01,628 --> 00:09:03,495 Not bad. How you doing, Scott? 212 00:09:03,496 --> 00:09:06,627 Back in the Money Pit area, Craig Tester 213 00:09:06,628 --> 00:09:08,099 and members of the team 214 00:09:08,100 --> 00:09:09,495 are approaching their target depth 215 00:09:09,496 --> 00:09:12,495 of approximately 60 feet in Borehole A-13, 216 00:09:12,496 --> 00:09:17,231 where they hope to encounter a mysterious cavity or chamber. 217 00:09:17,232 --> 00:09:20,099 Starting to look maroon-ish. 218 00:09:20,100 --> 00:09:21,429 - Yeah. - Anyway, 219 00:09:21,430 --> 00:09:24,165 it’s pretty... It’s maroon till, but... 220 00:09:24,166 --> 00:09:28,330 where’s our indication of an open cavern? 221 00:09:35,100 --> 00:09:36,759 Hey, Craig! 222 00:09:36,760 --> 00:09:39,232 Might have it. 223 00:09:47,496 --> 00:09:50,859 Hey, Craig! There it is. 224 00:09:52,463 --> 00:09:55,099 - It’s coming? - I could see air coming out. 225 00:09:55,100 --> 00:09:57,825 While drilling Borehole A-13 226 00:09:57,826 --> 00:09:59,363 in the Money Pit area, 227 00:09:59,364 --> 00:10:01,363 the team has just encountered 228 00:10:01,364 --> 00:10:02,759 a burst of air at the surface, 229 00:10:02,760 --> 00:10:06,363 offering evidence that they have once again penetrated 230 00:10:06,364 --> 00:10:08,693 a mysterious cavern or chamber 231 00:10:08,694 --> 00:10:11,231 some 60 feet below ground. 232 00:10:11,232 --> 00:10:12,232 It’s almost like 233 00:10:12,233 --> 00:10:14,099 there’s a bladder effect there or something 234 00:10:14,100 --> 00:10:15,363 where you’re pushing the water in 235 00:10:15,364 --> 00:10:16,364 and it’s compressing the air. 236 00:10:16,365 --> 00:10:18,231 When you break the rod, it pushes it back out again. 237 00:10:18,232 --> 00:10:21,760 - It shouldn’t do that. - Yeah. 238 00:10:22,430 --> 00:10:25,363 Well, you can’t compress air, 239 00:10:25,364 --> 00:10:28,627 so maybe we got our cavern, which is our bladder. 240 00:10:28,628 --> 00:10:30,231 Yep. 241 00:10:30,232 --> 00:10:32,363 We certainly have an interest 242 00:10:32,364 --> 00:10:37,165 in the air bubble phenomenon around Shaft 12 243 00:10:37,166 --> 00:10:39,231 indicating the possibility 244 00:10:39,232 --> 00:10:41,429 of an offset chamber in that area. 245 00:10:41,430 --> 00:10:44,165 But there was definitely air coming out when I was threading 246 00:10:44,166 --> 00:10:45,759 - on that last joint. - Okay. 247 00:10:45,760 --> 00:10:48,231 If it is and we confirm that, 248 00:10:48,232 --> 00:10:51,099 that may be the beginning point of all the features 249 00:10:51,100 --> 00:10:53,627 that we see around the C-1 cluster. 250 00:10:53,628 --> 00:10:56,562 That’s a phenomenon right there. 251 00:10:57,100 --> 00:10:58,363 It’s got to be a void. 252 00:10:58,364 --> 00:10:59,495 I would keep going. 253 00:10:59,496 --> 00:11:01,627 I mean, ’cause what’s in the core barrel 254 00:11:01,628 --> 00:11:03,693 is probably more important to us. 255 00:11:03,694 --> 00:11:07,198 Just drive ahead till you hit something hard. 256 00:11:07,199 --> 00:11:08,727 Okay. 257 00:11:09,232 --> 00:11:11,165 Is it possible 258 00:11:11,166 --> 00:11:12,495 that the team has drilled 259 00:11:12,496 --> 00:11:16,231 into an offset chamber connected to the original Money Pit? 260 00:11:16,232 --> 00:11:20,297 And if so, could they have finally pinpointed the source 261 00:11:20,298 --> 00:11:23,363 of the silver and gold they detected earlier this year 262 00:11:23,364 --> 00:11:26,363 in the so-called C-1 cluster? 263 00:11:26,364 --> 00:11:28,099 - 78, two. - Oh, really? 264 00:11:28,100 --> 00:11:29,231 - It’s going in? - Yeah. 265 00:11:29,232 --> 00:11:31,495 - Going... Oh, going in there? Okay. - Yeah. 266 00:11:31,496 --> 00:11:36,363 Empirical data like this is what’s gonna drive us 267 00:11:36,364 --> 00:11:37,364 to the Bravo Tango call 268 00:11:37,365 --> 00:11:40,759 where we succeed, where we are completely 269 00:11:40,760 --> 00:11:42,759 and utterly successful in understanding 270 00:11:42,760 --> 00:11:47,562 who, what, when, where, why about the Money Pit. 271 00:11:48,430 --> 00:11:50,331 Here it comes. 272 00:11:52,364 --> 00:11:53,759 82. 273 00:11:53,760 --> 00:11:56,364 Bottom is at 82. 274 00:12:00,232 --> 00:12:04,330 Well, we got some fairly dense material at the bottom. 275 00:12:04,331 --> 00:12:06,627 - I see that. - But a lot of slush and murk 276 00:12:06,628 --> 00:12:07,759 up here in our recovery. 277 00:12:07,760 --> 00:12:11,231 I don’t think that anything can open this up 278 00:12:11,232 --> 00:12:13,363 in a natural sense. This has to be people 279 00:12:13,364 --> 00:12:16,231 with a will to dig and open up a space. 280 00:12:16,232 --> 00:12:17,627 Oh! 281 00:12:17,628 --> 00:12:18,759 There we go. 282 00:12:18,760 --> 00:12:21,363 Ladies and gentlemen, 283 00:12:21,364 --> 00:12:22,561 what the heck? 284 00:12:22,562 --> 00:12:24,628 Here’s another one right here. 285 00:12:25,496 --> 00:12:27,825 It almost looks like grass. 286 00:12:27,826 --> 00:12:30,297 Maybe eelgrass or something washing in. 287 00:12:30,298 --> 00:12:31,363 Eelgrass? 288 00:12:31,364 --> 00:12:36,726 Found in the mysterious void some 60 feet underground? 289 00:12:36,727 --> 00:12:39,231 Back in 1850, 290 00:12:39,232 --> 00:12:41,330 when members of the Truro Company 291 00:12:41,331 --> 00:12:44,231 discovered the five stone box drains at Smith’s Cove 292 00:12:44,232 --> 00:12:47,231 which converged into a single flood tunnel 293 00:12:47,232 --> 00:12:48,363 leading toward the Money Pit, 294 00:12:48,364 --> 00:12:52,627 they found the drains covered by layers of coconut fiber 295 00:12:52,628 --> 00:12:54,099 and eelgrass. 296 00:12:54,100 --> 00:12:56,231 These durable, organic materials 297 00:12:56,232 --> 00:12:58,495 worked as a natural filtration system 298 00:12:58,496 --> 00:13:02,594 to keep sand and debris out of the drains. 299 00:13:02,595 --> 00:13:03,825 Is it possible 300 00:13:03,826 --> 00:13:06,627 that the mysterious void the team encountered 301 00:13:06,628 --> 00:13:08,627 was not the long-sought treasure chamber 302 00:13:08,628 --> 00:13:12,495 but instead a flood tunnel ingeniously designed 303 00:13:12,496 --> 00:13:14,231 to protect it? 304 00:13:14,232 --> 00:13:17,297 There is no aquifer at 55 feet. 305 00:13:17,298 --> 00:13:19,099 We hit some sort of loose material 306 00:13:19,100 --> 00:13:21,627 that carried air, and it wasn’t cribbed. 307 00:13:21,628 --> 00:13:25,727 That sort of sounds like a flood tunnel to me. 308 00:13:26,364 --> 00:13:28,363 Baffling, that’s for sure. 309 00:13:28,364 --> 00:13:30,495 Baffling all the way around, no question. 310 00:13:30,496 --> 00:13:33,627 Although the team is disappointed 311 00:13:33,628 --> 00:13:36,363 with the results of Borehole A-13, 312 00:13:36,364 --> 00:13:39,231 the fact that they have already detected 313 00:13:39,232 --> 00:13:40,100 treasure in this area 314 00:13:40,101 --> 00:13:42,231 and may have just encountered a flood tunnel 315 00:13:42,232 --> 00:13:45,231 gives them hope that they could still be close 316 00:13:45,232 --> 00:13:47,099 to the ultimate breakthrough. 317 00:13:47,100 --> 00:13:49,495 You know, we’re not done exploring the area, 318 00:13:49,496 --> 00:13:52,627 but I think, you know, we need to keep digging. 319 00:13:52,628 --> 00:13:55,330 - See what else is there. - Sounds good to me. 320 00:13:55,331 --> 00:13:57,298 Let’s get going. 321 00:13:58,430 --> 00:14:01,859 The following morning... 322 00:14:02,496 --> 00:14:03,594 Yeah, baby. 323 00:14:03,595 --> 00:14:05,759 While the drilling operation 324 00:14:05,760 --> 00:14:07,231 in the Money Pit continues... 325 00:14:07,232 --> 00:14:11,297 - I think today’s gonna be good, mate. - No doubt. 326 00:14:11,298 --> 00:14:13,231 At the southern edge 327 00:14:13,232 --> 00:14:15,627 of the triangle-shaped swamp, 328 00:14:15,628 --> 00:14:17,627 heavy equipment operator Billy Gerhardt, 329 00:14:17,628 --> 00:14:19,759 metal detection expert Gary Drayton 330 00:14:19,760 --> 00:14:21,627 and treasure hunter Michael John 331 00:14:21,628 --> 00:14:24,231 continue their search for more clues 332 00:14:24,232 --> 00:14:26,297 and hopefully valuables. 333 00:14:26,298 --> 00:14:27,363 All right, Billy. 334 00:14:27,364 --> 00:14:29,495 We’ll get stuck in, mate. We’ll keep our eyes 335 00:14:29,496 --> 00:14:31,363 and the metal detector to the ground 336 00:14:31,364 --> 00:14:33,099 - and see what we pull up. - Yep. 337 00:14:33,100 --> 00:14:35,463 - All right, mate. - Good luck. 338 00:14:40,496 --> 00:14:42,231 Here. What we got here? 339 00:14:42,232 --> 00:14:43,429 What’s that? 340 00:14:43,430 --> 00:14:46,825 - Ooh, yeah. Look at that. - Wow. 341 00:14:46,826 --> 00:14:49,495 - That is definitely shaped. - Yeah. No doubt. 342 00:14:49,496 --> 00:14:52,858 And I don’t think it’s a barrel stave. 343 00:14:52,859 --> 00:14:53,826 The heck is it? 344 00:14:53,827 --> 00:14:57,099 To me, it looks like probably a-a piece of oar 345 00:14:57,100 --> 00:14:58,363 - or a paddle or something. - Yeah. 346 00:14:58,364 --> 00:15:01,759 Another piece of a possible oar? 347 00:15:01,760 --> 00:15:02,760 Could this artifact 348 00:15:02,761 --> 00:15:07,099 and the similar object found one day ago be connected 349 00:15:07,100 --> 00:15:08,627 to the ship-related discoveries 350 00:15:08,628 --> 00:15:12,231 - the team has recovered in the swamp? - We recover 351 00:15:12,232 --> 00:15:15,759 a wide variety of pieces of wood out of the swamp. 352 00:15:15,760 --> 00:15:21,099 Are we getting closer to finding that ship in the swamp? 353 00:15:21,100 --> 00:15:21,760 One thing for sure, 354 00:15:21,761 --> 00:15:23,330 it’s definitely been shaped by man. 355 00:15:23,331 --> 00:15:25,858 - Does it taper? - GARY: Yeah, it tapers. - Yeah. 356 00:15:25,859 --> 00:15:27,363 All right, mate. We’ll put this to one side 357 00:15:27,364 --> 00:15:30,628 - and let you keep scooping, mate. - Yep. 358 00:15:32,199 --> 00:15:33,495 We have found a number 359 00:15:33,496 --> 00:15:35,495 of what we believe to be nautical items. 360 00:15:35,496 --> 00:15:39,627 We could possibly infer that there might be 361 00:15:39,628 --> 00:15:42,231 or might have been at one point a ship in the swamp. 362 00:15:42,232 --> 00:15:45,628 It’s hard to think that it’s mere coincidence. 363 00:15:51,364 --> 00:15:56,231 That’s a little bit of dimensional lumber here. 364 00:15:56,232 --> 00:15:57,166 Yeah. 365 00:15:57,167 --> 00:15:59,165 Yeah, you see those little scrapes 366 00:15:59,166 --> 00:16:02,495 that are taken out? There’s a little concave area? 367 00:16:02,496 --> 00:16:04,693 That means it was cut with an adze. 368 00:16:04,694 --> 00:16:08,627 Uh, to me, it looks like it’s a piece 369 00:16:08,628 --> 00:16:11,231 - of, like, decking even. - Yeah. 370 00:16:11,232 --> 00:16:14,495 Another possible piece of ship decking? 371 00:16:14,496 --> 00:16:18,231 And potentially shaped by an adze? 372 00:16:18,232 --> 00:16:19,759 Oh, look at that. 373 00:16:19,760 --> 00:16:23,627 - Four weeks ago... - Is it an old adze? 374 00:16:23,628 --> 00:16:25,759 - Could be. - While searching Lot 4 375 00:16:25,760 --> 00:16:27,759 on the western side of the island, 376 00:16:27,760 --> 00:16:29,099 Gary and Rick Lagina 377 00:16:29,100 --> 00:16:31,825 discovered one of these ancient cutting tools. 378 00:16:31,826 --> 00:16:34,363 One that Carmen Legge dated 379 00:16:34,364 --> 00:16:37,627 to between 1620 and 1740. 380 00:16:37,628 --> 00:16:40,627 This looks like it was adze-cut. 381 00:16:40,628 --> 00:16:41,759 Could that ancient tool 382 00:16:41,760 --> 00:16:45,627 have been used to shape this wooden object? 383 00:16:45,628 --> 00:16:48,627 So, we’ve got the piece of wood which was adze-cut, 384 00:16:48,628 --> 00:16:51,693 - and we’ve also found the adze. - We have... Yeah. 385 00:16:51,694 --> 00:16:53,627 It’s brilliant. You know what, mate? 386 00:16:53,628 --> 00:16:56,363 We got so many fascinating pieces of wood 387 00:16:56,364 --> 00:16:59,231 - out of this area. I’m gonna text Rick. - Mm. Okay. 388 00:16:59,232 --> 00:17:02,826 - Get Rick over here, check all this out. - Check it out. Yeah. 389 00:17:03,100 --> 00:17:05,231 I mean, this is getting interesting now, 390 00:17:05,232 --> 00:17:11,297 - isn’t it? - Yeah. 391 00:17:11,298 --> 00:17:13,297 - Hey, guys. - Hey, Rick. How you doing, mate? - How’re you doing, Rick? 392 00:17:13,298 --> 00:17:15,726 At the southern edge of the swamp, 393 00:17:15,727 --> 00:17:18,198 Rick Lagina arrives after being alerted 394 00:17:18,199 --> 00:17:22,165 to several new and potentially important discoveries 395 00:17:22,166 --> 00:17:23,462 and joins Gary Drayton, 396 00:17:23,463 --> 00:17:28,627 Michael John and Billy Gerhardt to search for more. 397 00:17:28,628 --> 00:17:29,759 Because you’re not dancing, 398 00:17:29,760 --> 00:17:32,462 I’m assuming you haven’t found you-know-what. 399 00:17:32,463 --> 00:17:36,099 No, mate. Unfortunately, I haven’t got a wood dance yet. 400 00:17:36,100 --> 00:17:37,198 If I did, 401 00:17:37,199 --> 00:17:38,429 it would be over some of these. 402 00:17:38,430 --> 00:17:40,495 If you had a wood dance, you’d be exhausted 403 00:17:40,496 --> 00:17:43,594 - by now, Gary. Come on. - Yeah. I’ll show you want we found. 404 00:17:43,595 --> 00:17:48,297 We found some really, really interesting pieces of wood. 405 00:17:48,298 --> 00:17:50,627 Check some of these out, mate. 406 00:17:50,628 --> 00:17:55,232 This, to me, was one of the-the cooler ones. 407 00:17:55,298 --> 00:17:59,825 Almost looks like a piece of decking or planking. 408 00:17:59,826 --> 00:18:01,363 And look, you see that? 409 00:18:01,364 --> 00:18:03,495 - Yeah. - Almost like it had been hit 410 00:18:03,496 --> 00:18:05,165 - by an adze. - Yeah. Yeah. 411 00:18:05,166 --> 00:18:07,462 - Yeah. - And remember, mate, we found the adze 412 00:18:07,463 --> 00:18:08,726 - on Lot 4. - Yep. 413 00:18:08,727 --> 00:18:10,363 This... I mean, it’s heavy. 414 00:18:10,364 --> 00:18:11,462 If you feel the heft of that, 415 00:18:11,463 --> 00:18:15,363 - it’s a hard wood by the feel of it. - Mm-hmm. 416 00:18:15,364 --> 00:18:16,693 And then there’s this one. 417 00:18:16,694 --> 00:18:19,165 That’s a little mystery object. 418 00:18:19,166 --> 00:18:21,330 - Hey, Bill. - Hey. 419 00:18:21,331 --> 00:18:23,099 Look at all these. 420 00:18:23,100 --> 00:18:27,099 It kind of looks like a barrel stave to me with that. 421 00:18:27,100 --> 00:18:28,858 Well, we thought barrel stave, 422 00:18:28,859 --> 00:18:32,594 but even if it was a top, it goes in so thin. 423 00:18:32,595 --> 00:18:33,726 It’s tapered like an oar. 424 00:18:33,727 --> 00:18:35,726 You know an oar is tapered like that? 425 00:18:35,727 --> 00:18:37,231 Like a broken paddle. 426 00:18:37,232 --> 00:18:38,594 Oh, a paddle. 427 00:18:38,595 --> 00:18:40,297 Yeah, that could be. 428 00:18:40,298 --> 00:18:43,825 Our only methodology here is C-14 testing, 429 00:18:43,826 --> 00:18:45,693 so I would suggest this one. 430 00:18:45,694 --> 00:18:48,231 This one because this is functional. 431 00:18:48,232 --> 00:18:51,297 This was designed to-to serve a purpose. 432 00:18:51,298 --> 00:18:53,099 - Yeah. - And this one, 433 00:18:53,100 --> 00:18:55,363 this one because of noticing the adze marks. 434 00:18:55,364 --> 00:18:57,858 Yeah. We have 435 00:18:57,859 --> 00:19:01,627 such a quantity of wood finds from the swamp. 436 00:19:01,628 --> 00:19:04,231 As we look at the items that have been found, 437 00:19:04,232 --> 00:19:07,462 any piece of wood that is obviously shaped, 438 00:19:07,463 --> 00:19:12,429 whether there be dowels or holes or saw marks, 439 00:19:12,430 --> 00:19:16,099 it demands for us to find a consulting expert 440 00:19:16,100 --> 00:19:17,363 who can come in and tell us, 441 00:19:17,364 --> 00:19:20,231 "This is important for this reason." 442 00:19:20,232 --> 00:19:21,627 The hope is that we 443 00:19:21,628 --> 00:19:24,429 maybe not find the reason why it was used 444 00:19:24,430 --> 00:19:28,198 but really what is it 445 00:19:28,199 --> 00:19:30,330 and why is it there? 446 00:19:30,331 --> 00:19:31,363 I’m hoping, 447 00:19:31,364 --> 00:19:33,198 Rick, that you guys can get 448 00:19:33,199 --> 00:19:35,297 a shipbuilding expert. 449 00:19:35,298 --> 00:19:38,165 Well, we do have a marine archaeologist coming. 450 00:19:38,166 --> 00:19:39,100 Dr. Spence. 451 00:19:39,101 --> 00:19:41,231 World-renowned, world-class. 452 00:19:41,232 --> 00:19:44,198 So, we’re gonna do exactly what you suggest: 453 00:19:44,199 --> 00:19:46,297 round up all the things that even have 454 00:19:46,298 --> 00:19:48,726 a bit of suspicion that they’re maritime-related, 455 00:19:48,727 --> 00:19:51,693 present them to him and see what he has to say. 456 00:19:51,694 --> 00:19:52,496 Excellent. 457 00:19:52,497 --> 00:19:55,726 And this is the type of stuff that hopefully will 458 00:19:55,727 --> 00:19:59,429 lead us to some of those round things that I like. 459 00:19:59,430 --> 00:20:01,363 They’ve got to be here. 460 00:20:01,364 --> 00:20:02,199 Yeah. 461 00:20:02,200 --> 00:20:05,099 Keep it all, wash it, catalog it. 462 00:20:05,100 --> 00:20:08,858 - And then the only thing to do is keep going. - Yeah. Okay. 463 00:20:08,859 --> 00:20:12,628 Okay. Let’s do it. 464 00:20:18,199 --> 00:20:21,297 - The following morning... - Did I tell you 465 00:20:21,298 --> 00:20:23,759 that when we get close to 50, we got to give Craig a call? 466 00:20:23,760 --> 00:20:25,627 - No, no, I heard that. Yeah. - Just to be... 467 00:20:25,628 --> 00:20:27,462 While the drilling operation 468 00:20:27,463 --> 00:20:29,231 continues at the Money Pit... 469 00:20:29,232 --> 00:20:32,165 So, gentlemen, we welcome Dr. Lee Spence. 470 00:20:32,166 --> 00:20:37,231 Very esteemed in marine archaeological work. - In the war room, 471 00:20:37,232 --> 00:20:40,693 Rick, Marty, Craig and other members of the team 472 00:20:40,694 --> 00:20:43,858 are meeting with underwater archaeologist 473 00:20:43,859 --> 00:20:45,858 and author Dr. Lee Spence. 474 00:20:45,859 --> 00:20:48,099 The reason for Dr. Spence’s visit 475 00:20:48,100 --> 00:20:50,726 to the... to the war room, of course, is these are 476 00:20:50,727 --> 00:20:54,165 items that have been found, uh, this year. 477 00:20:54,166 --> 00:20:56,726 Now, they’re not necessarily nautical, 478 00:20:56,727 --> 00:20:59,231 but we thought you might like to take a look. 479 00:20:59,232 --> 00:21:00,726 But before you get into that, 480 00:21:00,727 --> 00:21:02,495 if you could just tell Marty and Craig 481 00:21:02,496 --> 00:21:03,594 a little bit about your background? 482 00:21:03,595 --> 00:21:06,495 Well, it’s something... something I’ve done all my life. 483 00:21:06,496 --> 00:21:11,099 - I started finding shipwrecks when I was 12. - Wow. 484 00:21:11,100 --> 00:21:14,099 I became one of the early pioneers 485 00:21:14,100 --> 00:21:15,627 of modern underwater archaeology. 486 00:21:15,628 --> 00:21:17,726 And I say "modern underwater archaeology" 487 00:21:17,727 --> 00:21:19,561 ’cause the first underwater archaeology 488 00:21:19,562 --> 00:21:22,561 that I’m aware of was actually in the 1700s. 489 00:21:22,562 --> 00:21:26,594 You describe yourself as a marine archaeologist 490 00:21:26,595 --> 00:21:29,363 more so than a treasure hunter. 491 00:21:29,364 --> 00:21:32,594 Well, that’s ’cause the objective is the history. 492 00:21:32,595 --> 00:21:34,561 I absolutely love history. 493 00:21:34,562 --> 00:21:36,429 It’s very real to me. 494 00:21:36,430 --> 00:21:38,496 I think it’s very important. 495 00:21:38,760 --> 00:21:43,330 With a career that has so far spanned six decades, 496 00:21:43,331 --> 00:21:47,627 Dr. Spence has discovered more than 100 shipwrecks, 497 00:21:47,628 --> 00:21:51,858 including two American Civil War vessels, 498 00:21:51,859 --> 00:21:54,594 the SS Georgiana 499 00:21:54,595 --> 00:21:55,825 and the HL Hunley, 500 00:21:55,826 --> 00:21:59,858 a Confederate submarine that was considered by experts 501 00:21:59,859 --> 00:22:03,594 to be one of the key underwater archaeological finds 502 00:22:03,595 --> 00:22:05,429 of the 20th century. 503 00:22:05,430 --> 00:22:08,099 His exploration of sunken galleons 504 00:22:08,100 --> 00:22:12,231 that dated to between the 16th and 19th centuries 505 00:22:12,232 --> 00:22:14,627 has produced more than $50 million 506 00:22:14,628 --> 00:22:18,099 in recovered artifacts and treasure. 507 00:22:18,100 --> 00:22:19,594 The reason why Dr. Spence was invited here 508 00:22:19,595 --> 00:22:23,462 was simply because he has a lifetime of experience 509 00:22:23,463 --> 00:22:24,232 diving on wrecks. 510 00:22:24,233 --> 00:22:26,858 We’ve never had that type of experience 511 00:22:26,859 --> 00:22:28,627 to underwater archaeology 512 00:22:28,628 --> 00:22:32,628 that Dr. Spence brings to the table. 513 00:22:32,859 --> 00:22:34,693 We have assembled here 514 00:22:34,694 --> 00:22:36,726 what we think are the more ship-like, I’m gonna say, 515 00:22:36,727 --> 00:22:40,330 or more nautical things... Least to our untrained eye... 516 00:22:40,331 --> 00:22:41,759 - that we pulled out of the swamp. - Okay. 517 00:22:41,760 --> 00:22:43,594 And we’d really like your opinion. 518 00:22:43,595 --> 00:22:45,627 And you could start wherever you like. 519 00:22:45,628 --> 00:22:48,760 Let me start with this one right here. 520 00:22:49,595 --> 00:22:51,594 You’ve got three holes here 521 00:22:51,595 --> 00:22:55,330 that probably once had nails going through them. 522 00:22:55,331 --> 00:22:57,759 And I can think of... 523 00:22:57,760 --> 00:23:01,099 Maybe at one point, there was a board right here. 524 00:23:01,100 --> 00:23:05,198 You have this curved edge here like you would on a paddle, 525 00:23:05,199 --> 00:23:08,198 and it’s-it’s starting to make the curve back up. 526 00:23:08,199 --> 00:23:11,330 So, it wouldn’t have had to have been much wider than this. 527 00:23:11,331 --> 00:23:14,429 And they nailed this in, attached a handle to it. 528 00:23:14,430 --> 00:23:17,297 - That’s likely a paddle, then. - To make 529 00:23:17,298 --> 00:23:18,363 a paddle. 530 00:23:18,364 --> 00:23:19,364 Lee, take a look 531 00:23:19,365 --> 00:23:22,363 at this one. This was, uh, clearly a worked piece. 532 00:23:22,364 --> 00:23:24,462 We did radio carbon-date this one, 533 00:23:24,463 --> 00:23:26,165 and the results are right there. 534 00:23:26,166 --> 00:23:30,363 So, this came off the swamp, found by Billy. 535 00:23:30,364 --> 00:23:33,232 This is man-made. 536 00:23:33,859 --> 00:23:37,627 And they came up with some real interesting possibilities 537 00:23:37,628 --> 00:23:40,825 as far as the dates go. 538 00:23:40,826 --> 00:23:42,099 I find this amazing. 539 00:23:42,100 --> 00:23:46,759 It dates between 1520 and 1674. 540 00:23:46,760 --> 00:23:48,759 I’m impressed with it. 541 00:23:48,760 --> 00:23:51,100 But does it cry "ship"? 542 00:23:51,199 --> 00:23:54,297 It could easily be part of a ship. 543 00:23:54,298 --> 00:23:56,364 Very easily. 544 00:24:03,100 --> 00:24:07,099 - Does it cry "ship"? - It could easily be part of a ship. 545 00:24:07,100 --> 00:24:07,760 Very easily. 546 00:24:07,761 --> 00:24:09,627 In the war room, 547 00:24:09,628 --> 00:24:13,495 world-renowned underwater archaeologist Dr. Lee Spence 548 00:24:13,496 --> 00:24:15,231 has just corroborated 549 00:24:15,232 --> 00:24:18,198 that a piece of wood planking recently found 550 00:24:18,199 --> 00:24:20,231 by the Oak Island team in the swamp 551 00:24:20,232 --> 00:24:22,759 and which was carbon-dated to the 16th century 552 00:24:22,760 --> 00:24:26,727 could be part of a large sailing vessel. 553 00:24:26,760 --> 00:24:30,099 Such an early piece that you’re finding, 554 00:24:30,100 --> 00:24:32,363 I think this was worked. 555 00:24:32,364 --> 00:24:33,495 I’m sure you didn’t find 556 00:24:33,496 --> 00:24:36,627 the oldest piece of worked wood on the island. 557 00:24:36,628 --> 00:24:39,462 And yet look how old this probably is. 558 00:24:39,463 --> 00:24:41,759 Right. -Interesting. 559 00:24:41,760 --> 00:24:44,495 - I’m impressed with it. - So, it... Really, 560 00:24:44,496 --> 00:24:45,759 to me, the most interesting item 561 00:24:45,760 --> 00:24:46,760 - is right here. - Yeah. 562 00:24:46,761 --> 00:24:49,495 I think that could be, like, a belaying pin. 563 00:24:49,496 --> 00:24:50,594 If that’s what it was, 564 00:24:50,595 --> 00:24:52,627 it would be for a very small sailboat 565 00:24:52,628 --> 00:24:55,462 ’cause you wouldn’t have big line on it, 566 00:24:55,463 --> 00:24:58,759 and you would lace it around to hold it in place. 567 00:24:58,760 --> 00:25:01,759 Or it reminds me of a fid. 568 00:25:01,760 --> 00:25:05,495 It can be spelled P-H-I-D or F-I-D. 569 00:25:05,496 --> 00:25:07,627 - Mm-hmm. - One with this diameter 570 00:25:07,628 --> 00:25:09,231 would be used for working 571 00:25:09,232 --> 00:25:10,759 a real heavy rope. 572 00:25:10,760 --> 00:25:12,429 You know, like anchor cable. 573 00:25:12,430 --> 00:25:13,627 - Oh. - Either way, 574 00:25:13,628 --> 00:25:15,363 - it looks nautical to me. - Okay. 575 00:25:15,364 --> 00:25:16,627 That’s what I was trying to ask. 576 00:25:16,628 --> 00:25:19,231 What does it do to a rope? 577 00:25:19,232 --> 00:25:22,363 For a fid, you’re using it to pry the line apart. 578 00:25:22,364 --> 00:25:24,759 - You know how you have the rope twisted? - Mm-hmm. 579 00:25:24,760 --> 00:25:26,330 And it’s real tight, 580 00:25:26,331 --> 00:25:28,759 and you take it, and you stick it between, 581 00:25:28,760 --> 00:25:30,198 and you separate the line 582 00:25:30,199 --> 00:25:32,462 so you can stick another piece in 583 00:25:32,463 --> 00:25:34,495 - to splice it. - I see. 584 00:25:34,496 --> 00:25:35,594 If this was a fid... 585 00:25:35,595 --> 00:25:39,495 And it... and it is rather large at the end... it would’ve been 586 00:25:39,496 --> 00:25:41,330 - a large line. - Yes, it would be. 587 00:25:41,331 --> 00:25:43,759 Yes, and I think it’s more likely a fid 588 00:25:43,760 --> 00:25:46,858 - than it is a belaying pin. - Mm-hmm. 589 00:25:46,859 --> 00:25:49,825 Okay. Well, that’s interesting. 590 00:25:50,502 --> 00:25:53,534 When-when did it come into use? 591 00:25:53,559 --> 00:25:55,931 About as long as they’ve had rope. 592 00:25:55,932 --> 00:25:57,459 So, 593 00:25:57,460 --> 00:25:59,558 - thousands of years. - Wow. 594 00:25:59,559 --> 00:26:02,195 A possible fid? A tool designed 595 00:26:02,196 --> 00:26:05,931 for maneuvering large ropes on sailing vessels? 596 00:26:05,932 --> 00:26:08,063 Could this artifact be connected 597 00:26:08,064 --> 00:26:09,799 to the other potential ship pieces 598 00:26:09,800 --> 00:26:14,459 and the massive stone wharf that were found in the swamp 599 00:26:14,460 --> 00:26:16,195 and also help explain 600 00:26:16,196 --> 00:26:19,327 the 200-foot-long galleon-shaped anomaly 601 00:26:19,328 --> 00:26:21,459 detected by seismic scanning 602 00:26:21,460 --> 00:26:24,459 back in 2018? 603 00:26:24,460 --> 00:26:26,459 This would’ve been used on a big rope, 604 00:26:26,460 --> 00:26:29,063 which implies big ship visiting at some point. 605 00:26:29,064 --> 00:26:32,799 - And to me, that’s the most likely. - Mm-hmm. 606 00:26:32,800 --> 00:26:35,063 The so-called fid... 607 00:26:35,064 --> 00:26:37,195 I thought that was very interesting 608 00:26:37,196 --> 00:26:39,327 because that instrument has been used 609 00:26:39,328 --> 00:26:41,063 for a very, very long time. 610 00:26:41,064 --> 00:26:44,459 What is a piece of a sailing ship doing 611 00:26:44,460 --> 00:26:47,195 in the swamp? I don’t know. 612 00:26:47,196 --> 00:26:51,799 I do know it’s worth continuing investigating this area. 613 00:26:51,800 --> 00:26:54,932 - Now, let’s see this. - This one? 614 00:26:56,559 --> 00:26:59,063 This was in the swamp 615 00:26:59,064 --> 00:27:01,459 near swamp road, 616 00:27:01,460 --> 00:27:04,328 and it was around ten feet deep. 617 00:27:04,800 --> 00:27:05,931 When I look at this, 618 00:27:05,932 --> 00:27:08,931 something that immediately jumps to my mind... 619 00:27:08,932 --> 00:27:12,559 Why is... Why does it have these angles? 620 00:27:13,328 --> 00:27:15,063 This piece is broken off here. 621 00:27:15,064 --> 00:27:16,931 This is not a nice cut. 622 00:27:16,932 --> 00:27:18,459 This is where it broke, 623 00:27:18,460 --> 00:27:21,799 and so this probably continued on down farther. 624 00:27:21,800 --> 00:27:24,294 - Sure. - I can also see 625 00:27:24,295 --> 00:27:25,459 this as a step, 626 00:27:25,460 --> 00:27:28,931 and you have a block of wood down here, 627 00:27:28,932 --> 00:27:32,195 and you’re nailing the remainder that’s broken off here. 628 00:27:32,196 --> 00:27:33,799 You’re nailing it in. At some point, 629 00:27:33,800 --> 00:27:36,195 Broke. - Mm-hmm. 630 00:27:36,196 --> 00:27:38,327 And that would explain why there are no nails. 631 00:27:38,328 --> 00:27:40,196 - Yes, it would. - Yeah. 632 00:27:40,932 --> 00:27:43,459 Which of these would you carbon-date? 633 00:27:43,460 --> 00:27:45,327 I probably would do-do that, 634 00:27:45,328 --> 00:27:47,063 but the bad thing about that 635 00:27:47,064 --> 00:27:49,426 - is we really don’t know what it is. - Mm-hmm. 636 00:27:49,427 --> 00:27:51,063 But it’s clearly worked by man, 637 00:27:51,064 --> 00:27:53,459 so if it came back to 1200 AD, 638 00:27:53,460 --> 00:27:55,426 - that would be meaningful. - Yeah. Yeah. 639 00:27:55,427 --> 00:27:59,327 It’s certainly gratifying that Dr. Spence feels 640 00:27:59,328 --> 00:28:01,459 that several of the items on the table 641 00:28:01,460 --> 00:28:03,195 are nautical in appearance. 642 00:28:03,196 --> 00:28:05,931 He says, "Yes, this could be from a ship. This is even..." 643 00:28:05,932 --> 00:28:08,327 I think he might have even said "likely from a ship." 644 00:28:08,328 --> 00:28:10,459 We need to test this thing more, though, 645 00:28:10,460 --> 00:28:12,294 because it could have more information 646 00:28:12,295 --> 00:28:14,459 based on what cultures did this. 647 00:28:14,460 --> 00:28:16,195 We need to follow this one a little bit. 648 00:28:16,196 --> 00:28:17,327 Found it very interesting. 649 00:28:17,328 --> 00:28:21,931 Well, Lee, look, thank you. That was extremely informative. 650 00:28:21,932 --> 00:28:22,800 It’s a fresh impression 651 00:28:22,801 --> 00:28:24,931 on things we just didn’t think about, 652 00:28:24,932 --> 00:28:26,558 and that’s always very valuable. 653 00:28:26,559 --> 00:28:29,063 So, I thank you again on behalf of the team. 654 00:28:29,064 --> 00:28:31,195 Thank you for inviting me here. 655 00:28:31,196 --> 00:28:32,459 - Thank you. - Thank you. 656 00:28:32,460 --> 00:28:34,294 As Rick, Marty and Craig 657 00:28:34,295 --> 00:28:36,558 finish their meeting in the war room... 658 00:28:36,559 --> 00:28:40,195 So, you ready to put some coil to the soil, mate? 659 00:28:40,196 --> 00:28:41,558 I’m ready. I’m ready. 660 00:28:41,559 --> 00:28:44,195 Metal detection expert Gary Drayton 661 00:28:44,196 --> 00:28:46,195 and treasure hunter Michael John 662 00:28:46,196 --> 00:28:48,063 arrive at Lot 32. 663 00:28:48,064 --> 00:28:51,195 Different lot, different treasure hunting prospects, 664 00:28:51,196 --> 00:28:54,030 - mate. All the time. - Yeah. Exactly. 665 00:28:54,031 --> 00:28:55,459 They are eager to search 666 00:28:55,460 --> 00:29:00,195 for new and hopefully valuable clues and artifacts. 667 00:29:00,196 --> 00:29:02,931 I expect there’s gonna be some signs... 668 00:29:02,932 --> 00:29:05,195 - Yeah. - Of wharf activity 669 00:29:05,196 --> 00:29:06,931 - in this area. - Yeah, that’s right. Exactly. Yeah. 670 00:29:06,932 --> 00:29:11,931 And this could be a golden opportunity for us. 671 00:29:11,932 --> 00:29:13,030 That’s right. 672 00:29:13,031 --> 00:29:14,063 What have we got here? 673 00:29:14,064 --> 00:29:17,195 - Just one week ago... - Look at the size of that. 674 00:29:17,196 --> 00:29:19,063 Working with Marty Lagina, 675 00:29:19,064 --> 00:29:21,327 Gary uncovered a large spike 676 00:29:21,328 --> 00:29:24,327 that may date back three centuries or more 677 00:29:24,328 --> 00:29:27,195 and which blacksmithing expert Carmen Legge believes 678 00:29:27,196 --> 00:29:33,064 was used to anchor ships to large boulders on the beach. 679 00:29:37,932 --> 00:29:39,327 Oh. 680 00:29:39,328 --> 00:29:41,459 And it was also on Lot 32 681 00:29:41,460 --> 00:29:44,459 that, one year ago, the team found 682 00:29:44,460 --> 00:29:46,195 not only a large wharf spike 683 00:29:46,196 --> 00:29:49,931 but also a lead cargo bag seal. 684 00:29:49,932 --> 00:29:51,327 With there being a wharf here 685 00:29:51,328 --> 00:29:54,195 and the artifacts we’ve already recovered, mate, 686 00:29:54,196 --> 00:29:58,459 - I want to know what they were unloading here. - Yes. 687 00:29:58,460 --> 00:30:01,459 And what connection this area has to the Money Pit. 688 00:30:01,460 --> 00:30:04,931 I got a good feeling about this lot, especially having 689 00:30:04,932 --> 00:30:06,459 - so many flags to go for. - Yes. 690 00:30:06,460 --> 00:30:09,327 - All right, mate. You ready to get stuck in? - I’m ready. 691 00:30:09,328 --> 00:30:10,459 Let’s go for it. 692 00:30:10,460 --> 00:30:13,525 We have made some significant discoveries 693 00:30:13,526 --> 00:30:17,459 on Lot 32. Uh, close proximity to the ocean. 694 00:30:17,460 --> 00:30:19,459 One could suggest or speculate 695 00:30:19,460 --> 00:30:21,195 that people were in that area 696 00:30:21,196 --> 00:30:23,459 carrying a load on and onto a wharf. 697 00:30:23,460 --> 00:30:26,799 If we find that they’re headed in a certain direction, 698 00:30:26,800 --> 00:30:28,195 we can draw that line. 699 00:30:28,196 --> 00:30:30,898 So, every little clue is important. 700 00:30:30,899 --> 00:30:35,130 Ah, mate. Another good two-way repeatable signal. 701 00:30:48,460 --> 00:30:52,799 - Oh, still in the hole, I believe. - Yes, it is. 702 00:30:52,800 --> 00:30:54,294 Unless it’s on the edge. 703 00:30:54,295 --> 00:30:56,899 Come, baby. Be in there. 704 00:30:57,932 --> 00:30:59,327 Oh, look at how deep 705 00:30:59,328 --> 00:31:01,063 - that is, mate. Yeah. - That’s deep. Yep. 706 00:31:01,064 --> 00:31:02,195 Like I always tell you, Michael. 707 00:31:02,196 --> 00:31:05,460 - Yeah. - Deeper it is, the older it normally is. 708 00:31:10,064 --> 00:31:11,931 - Well, mate, we’ll see if we got it out. - Sure. 709 00:31:11,932 --> 00:31:15,932 - - You have got it out. - I did. Yeah. 710 00:31:21,328 --> 00:31:22,064 There we go. 711 00:31:22,065 --> 00:31:24,426 Oh, I always get excited when you see this edge. 712 00:31:24,427 --> 00:31:28,196 - You see that nice, round edge there, mate? - Yes. 713 00:31:29,460 --> 00:31:32,559 Is it a coin? Or is it a button? 714 00:31:41,800 --> 00:31:44,162 - You see that nice, round edge there, mate? - Yeah. 715 00:31:44,163 --> 00:31:46,931 Is it a coin? Or is it a button? 716 00:31:46,932 --> 00:31:49,327 - Let it be a coin. - It’s a coin, 717 00:31:49,328 --> 00:31:51,162 - mate! It’s a coin! - Yes! Yes. 718 00:31:51,163 --> 00:31:53,063 - Look at that. -Oh, my gosh. 719 00:31:53,064 --> 00:31:57,327 On Lot 32, just west of the swamp, 720 00:31:57,328 --> 00:32:00,129 metal detection expert Gary Drayton 721 00:32:00,130 --> 00:32:02,426 and treasure hunter Michael John 722 00:32:02,427 --> 00:32:05,865 have just made a potentially valuable discovery. 723 00:32:05,866 --> 00:32:08,327 Now, I don’t know how old, mate. 724 00:32:08,328 --> 00:32:10,558 And it is always tempting 725 00:32:10,559 --> 00:32:12,931 just to-to rub it, 726 00:32:12,932 --> 00:32:15,327 - but we can’t just in case we damage it. - Yeah. No. 727 00:32:15,328 --> 00:32:19,525 Get this to Kelly in the archaeology trailer, mate. 728 00:32:19,526 --> 00:32:20,799 He’ll do his business on this. 729 00:32:20,800 --> 00:32:22,294 - Mm-hmm. - But why I’m excited 730 00:32:22,295 --> 00:32:26,063 about this coin, mate. It looks like an old British copper. 731 00:32:26,064 --> 00:32:28,426 And it wasn’t that long ago 732 00:32:28,427 --> 00:32:31,162 when it was Rick, Marty, 733 00:32:31,163 --> 00:32:33,063 uh, Dave and I. 734 00:32:33,064 --> 00:32:35,931 We were on that ridge on the other side of the swamp. 735 00:32:35,932 --> 00:32:38,459 We pulled two coins up. British coppers 736 00:32:38,460 --> 00:32:42,063 - from the 1600s, mate. - Yeah. Oh. 737 00:32:42,064 --> 00:32:43,931 That’s Charles II. 738 00:32:43,932 --> 00:32:49,162 - Come on. - Yeah, that’s Charles. And I can see a carolus. 739 00:32:49,163 --> 00:32:51,525 Four years ago 740 00:32:51,526 --> 00:32:52,799 on Lot 16 741 00:32:52,800 --> 00:32:55,261 in the same area where the team has found evidence 742 00:32:55,262 --> 00:32:56,898 of cargo being transported 743 00:32:56,899 --> 00:32:58,261 between the swamp and the Money Pit... 744 00:32:58,262 --> 00:33:01,799 That’s way too early for people to be here. - Gary, 745 00:33:01,800 --> 00:33:04,426 along with Rick, Marty and Dave Blankenship, 746 00:33:04,427 --> 00:33:07,799 discovered two 17th-century British coins. 747 00:33:07,800 --> 00:33:11,426 - It means something! - That is fantastic. 748 00:33:11,427 --> 00:33:14,162 This has been taking a dirt nap 749 00:33:14,163 --> 00:33:16,294 for a very long time. 750 00:33:16,295 --> 00:33:18,195 Although the team has found evidence 751 00:33:18,196 --> 00:33:20,997 dating as far back as the 14th century 752 00:33:20,998 --> 00:33:24,426 of both French and Portuguese activity on Oak Island, 753 00:33:24,427 --> 00:33:26,898 could this coin offer possible evidence 754 00:33:26,899 --> 00:33:30,129 that a British operation to hide valuables here 755 00:33:30,130 --> 00:33:32,195 took place sometime later? 756 00:33:32,196 --> 00:33:35,030 Perhaps in the 17th century? 757 00:33:35,031 --> 00:33:37,195 I can’t believe how thin the-the coin is, man. 758 00:33:37,196 --> 00:33:40,030 Which is great for us. The thinner it is, 759 00:33:40,031 --> 00:33:43,129 - the more chance that it’s an older coin. - Yeah. 760 00:33:43,130 --> 00:33:45,865 - Dang, mate. This is brilliant. - Yeah. 761 00:33:45,866 --> 00:33:48,327 Oh, fantastic. 762 00:33:48,328 --> 00:33:49,525 - You can’t beat it. - Yeah. 763 00:33:49,526 --> 00:33:52,558 This is the reason why Michael John and I 764 00:33:52,559 --> 00:33:54,393 came back to Lot 32. 765 00:33:54,394 --> 00:33:55,196 The chance 766 00:33:55,197 --> 00:33:59,459 of holding a beautiful old coin like this in our hands. 767 00:33:59,460 --> 00:34:02,799 Uh, this has got 1700s written all over it, 768 00:34:02,800 --> 00:34:06,393 and I’m fairly certain when this coin is cleaned up, 769 00:34:06,394 --> 00:34:09,195 there is gonna be a king on it. 770 00:34:09,196 --> 00:34:12,525 Oh, beautiful. Love it. 771 00:34:12,526 --> 00:34:15,130 You can’t beat it. 772 00:34:21,328 --> 00:34:23,327 What a sloppy mess, eh? 773 00:34:23,328 --> 00:34:26,558 While operations continue at both the swamp 774 00:34:26,559 --> 00:34:28,932 and the Money Pit area... 775 00:34:30,064 --> 00:34:31,931 Every day could be the day, Charles. 776 00:34:31,932 --> 00:34:34,162 - Afternoon, guys. - Hi, guys. 777 00:34:34,163 --> 00:34:37,063 - Hello, guys. - Rick and Marty Lagina, 778 00:34:37,064 --> 00:34:38,898 along with their partner, Craig Tester, 779 00:34:38,899 --> 00:34:40,898 have gathered members of the team 780 00:34:40,899 --> 00:34:44,063 in the war room to hear a scientific report 781 00:34:44,064 --> 00:34:46,799 on two of their most recent discoveries. 782 00:34:46,800 --> 00:34:48,997 These two items that we have here, both, I think, 783 00:34:48,998 --> 00:34:50,294 we found quite interesting. 784 00:34:50,295 --> 00:34:51,196 They were retrieved 785 00:34:51,197 --> 00:34:53,558 from roughly ten feet down in the swamp. 786 00:34:53,559 --> 00:34:55,865 The first of these artifacts 787 00:34:55,866 --> 00:34:56,931 was found one week ago 788 00:34:56,932 --> 00:34:59,129 near the southern edge of the swamp. 789 00:34:59,130 --> 00:35:02,426 The second, discovered in the same area this week, 790 00:35:02,427 --> 00:35:05,261 was identified as possibly being part of a ship 791 00:35:05,262 --> 00:35:09,898 by renowned underwater archaeologist Dr. Lee Spence. 792 00:35:09,899 --> 00:35:14,799 Marty, you are well aware of the items in front of us. 793 00:35:14,800 --> 00:35:16,426 We have a little one. It’s the one 794 00:35:16,427 --> 00:35:19,162 that Tom Nolan mentioned had a rope burn on it. 795 00:35:19,163 --> 00:35:21,393 Yeah. Yes, I’m quite aware. Yes. 796 00:35:21,394 --> 00:35:23,997 And then we have this trapezoidal piece 797 00:35:23,998 --> 00:35:26,063 that we thought was very old, 798 00:35:26,064 --> 00:35:28,558 and I think that was really the impetus 799 00:35:28,559 --> 00:35:31,558 for sending it in for C-14 testing. 800 00:35:31,559 --> 00:35:32,460 But we have those results, 801 00:35:32,461 --> 00:35:34,162 and Dr. Spooner’s intrigued by them, 802 00:35:34,163 --> 00:35:37,931 I believe. So, he’s gonna tell us what his thoughts are. 803 00:35:37,932 --> 00:35:41,932 So, the swamp is critical. 804 00:35:42,460 --> 00:35:44,327 Uh, as I’ve said so many times before, 805 00:35:44,328 --> 00:35:46,865 the swamp is a book. 806 00:35:46,866 --> 00:35:48,799 Because every time we dig there, 807 00:35:48,800 --> 00:35:52,459 there’s something very important that we might find out. 808 00:35:52,460 --> 00:35:53,799 Not just about artifacts 809 00:35:53,800 --> 00:35:56,459 but also about what’s gone on in the past. 810 00:35:56,460 --> 00:35:59,294 You know, so, we have two pieces in front of us. Two... 811 00:35:59,295 --> 00:36:00,799 Two wood pieces that I was very interested in 812 00:36:00,800 --> 00:36:04,294 and because Billy found them at significant depth. 813 00:36:04,295 --> 00:36:08,327 So we know it’s in an early chapter in the book. 814 00:36:08,328 --> 00:36:12,931 Um, both of them look like nautical pieces to me. 815 00:36:12,932 --> 00:36:14,294 And the trapezoidal piece there, 816 00:36:14,295 --> 00:36:19,800 it dated out at, uh, 1683 to 1735. 817 00:36:24,998 --> 00:36:27,195 The trapezoidal piece, it dated out 818 00:36:27,196 --> 00:36:29,327 at 1683 to 1735. 819 00:36:29,328 --> 00:36:32,261 In the Oak Island war room, 820 00:36:32,262 --> 00:36:34,327 geoscientist Dr. Ian Spooner 821 00:36:34,328 --> 00:36:38,525 is presenting a carbon-14 report on two wooden artifacts 822 00:36:38,526 --> 00:36:39,460 recently found in the swamp 823 00:36:39,461 --> 00:36:43,799 that he believes could be parts of an ancient sailing vessel. 824 00:36:43,800 --> 00:36:45,393 - Let’s stop on that one for a minute... - Yeah. 825 00:36:45,394 --> 00:36:47,525 ’cause I just want to say something with that piece. 826 00:36:47,526 --> 00:36:49,799 We looked at that with Dr. Spence 827 00:36:49,800 --> 00:36:51,195 in a... in a war room, 828 00:36:51,196 --> 00:36:53,799 and it reminded me of something. 829 00:36:53,800 --> 00:36:55,459 So Scott and I took a-a road trip, 830 00:36:55,460 --> 00:36:57,426 and we went to the Maritime Museum of the Atlantic. 831 00:36:57,427 --> 00:37:01,393 And this is what it reminded me of. 832 00:37:01,394 --> 00:37:02,865 It’s one of the longboats 833 00:37:02,866 --> 00:37:05,261 that you would bring provisions and whatnot in 834 00:37:05,262 --> 00:37:07,931 from a bigger ship to shore. 835 00:37:07,932 --> 00:37:10,426 And inside that 836 00:37:10,427 --> 00:37:12,932 is this. 837 00:37:13,394 --> 00:37:15,162 It’s like a bulkhead. 838 00:37:15,163 --> 00:37:16,997 - Bulkheads of the boat. - Yep. 839 00:37:16,998 --> 00:37:19,030 That’s what I think that is. 840 00:37:19,031 --> 00:37:21,558 - Yeah, I’d agree 100%. - So, that makes it really interesting 841 00:37:21,559 --> 00:37:24,261 - because it is something nautical... - Right. 842 00:37:24,262 --> 00:37:28,063 In our swamp. Or-or it would appear to be. 843 00:37:28,064 --> 00:37:29,898 So, does that mean that people are bringing 844 00:37:29,899 --> 00:37:31,799 small boats into the swamp? 845 00:37:31,800 --> 00:37:33,129 This may lend 846 00:37:33,130 --> 00:37:35,129 a little bit more credibility 847 00:37:35,730 --> 00:37:36,993 to that story. 848 00:37:36,994 --> 00:37:38,795 - A - fragment of a bulkhead 849 00:37:38,796 --> 00:37:42,465 or cargo hold from a small sailing vessel? 850 00:37:43,066 --> 00:37:47,362 And dating back to as early as 1683? 851 00:37:47,363 --> 00:37:48,593 During the colonial period 852 00:37:48,594 --> 00:37:52,263 between the late 15th and 18th centuries, 853 00:37:52,264 --> 00:37:53,725 massive sailing vessels 854 00:37:53,726 --> 00:37:55,527 that were too big to be docked at shore 855 00:37:55,528 --> 00:37:58,263 were often anchored in deeper waters 856 00:37:58,264 --> 00:38:00,263 as smaller boats were utilized 857 00:38:00,264 --> 00:38:02,999 to carry cargo to shipping wharfs. 858 00:38:03,000 --> 00:38:06,098 Since the team has unearthed the stone wharf 859 00:38:06,099 --> 00:38:08,131 in the southeast corner of the swamp, 860 00:38:08,132 --> 00:38:11,065 could Doug and Dr. Spooner be correct 861 00:38:11,066 --> 00:38:13,131 that this artifact is evidence 862 00:38:13,132 --> 00:38:15,197 of such an operation being conducted 863 00:38:15,198 --> 00:38:18,263 in the 17th century on Oak Island? 864 00:38:18,264 --> 00:38:23,065 The dates that seem to be relevant more and more are 865 00:38:23,066 --> 00:38:25,395 mid-1600s to the late 1600s. 866 00:38:25,396 --> 00:38:29,197 Human beings were at that level doing some work, 867 00:38:29,198 --> 00:38:31,725 some endeavor to hide something, 868 00:38:31,726 --> 00:38:34,197 save something, store something. 869 00:38:34,198 --> 00:38:38,999 I believe we must continue to do the work necessary 870 00:38:39,000 --> 00:38:41,395 to come to a further understanding 871 00:38:41,396 --> 00:38:42,494 of what the swamp can tell us 872 00:38:42,495 --> 00:38:47,197 in terms of what the original depositional work was. 873 00:38:47,198 --> 00:38:48,725 How about the other one? 874 00:38:48,726 --> 00:38:51,197 The second sample, I’ve never seen that before. 875 00:38:51,198 --> 00:38:52,099 I don’t know what it is. 876 00:38:52,100 --> 00:38:53,527 - But there’s a rope burn on it. - Yeah. 877 00:38:53,528 --> 00:38:56,329 - Mm-hmm. - So, again, we have 878 00:38:56,330 --> 00:38:59,725 dates that range from 1680 to 1740. 879 00:38:59,726 --> 00:39:01,098 Hmm. Interesting. 880 00:39:01,099 --> 00:39:05,999 I’d say that those two are very, very similar age 881 00:39:06,000 --> 00:39:08,395 but pre-searcher. 882 00:39:08,396 --> 00:39:10,264 Oh, absolutely. 883 00:39:10,462 --> 00:39:12,395 So, that’s sort of where my story ends. 884 00:39:12,396 --> 00:39:15,362 The swamp is still a very important place. 885 00:39:15,363 --> 00:39:18,494 I know we’ve done a lot of looking and searching, 886 00:39:18,495 --> 00:39:21,758 but there’s still areas that we haven’t really touched too much. 887 00:39:21,759 --> 00:39:25,395 Well, for my part, the dates are wonderful. 888 00:39:25,396 --> 00:39:28,329 They raise all kinds of possibilities. 889 00:39:28,330 --> 00:39:30,395 And, okay, there was a lot of activity 890 00:39:30,396 --> 00:39:32,725 between 1680 and 1750. 891 00:39:32,726 --> 00:39:34,659 Well, who were those people? 892 00:39:34,660 --> 00:39:37,263 Were they here looking for something themselves? 893 00:39:37,264 --> 00:39:39,725 Or were they depositing, 894 00:39:39,726 --> 00:39:42,197 which would be more exciting? 895 00:39:42,198 --> 00:39:45,527 The swamp is more of a mystery than it’s ever been. 896 00:39:45,528 --> 00:39:48,593 We found all kinds of things that seem out of place 897 00:39:48,594 --> 00:39:50,527 and several pieces of wood 898 00:39:50,528 --> 00:39:53,527 that could have been used on a ship. 899 00:39:53,528 --> 00:39:55,197 Now we have hard science 900 00:39:55,198 --> 00:39:57,197 from many different methodologies 901 00:39:57,198 --> 00:40:01,725 that something significant happened here in the late 1600s. 902 00:40:01,726 --> 00:40:05,659 The swamp continues, really, to be enigmatic 903 00:40:05,660 --> 00:40:07,593 and a real puzzle. 904 00:40:07,594 --> 00:40:09,263 How about you, Rick? 905 00:40:10,726 --> 00:40:15,065 That, you know, you’re always looking for science 906 00:40:15,066 --> 00:40:17,329 to provide overlap information, 907 00:40:17,330 --> 00:40:20,132 and I think we have it here today. 908 00:40:20,528 --> 00:40:22,230 I think these dates are 909 00:40:22,231 --> 00:40:23,659 interesting evidence of activity, 910 00:40:23,660 --> 00:40:27,131 - but I-I want to know the why, obviously. - I do, too. 911 00:40:27,132 --> 00:40:29,659 So, that’s where I’m at. 912 00:40:29,660 --> 00:40:31,230 But we have to take every lesson 913 00:40:31,231 --> 00:40:33,659 we learn in this room and apply it out back, 914 00:40:33,660 --> 00:40:35,527 you know, with the eyes and boots. 915 00:40:35,528 --> 00:40:39,461 This has been very informative and-and, uh, and enlightening, 916 00:40:39,462 --> 00:40:42,362 so we appreciate it, certainly. 917 00:40:42,363 --> 00:40:43,330 Good. 918 00:40:43,331 --> 00:40:44,659 - Works for me. - Okay. 919 00:40:44,660 --> 00:40:47,527 - See you later. - See you the next time. 920 00:40:47,528 --> 00:40:51,527 At the close of another incredible week, 921 00:40:51,528 --> 00:40:53,527 Rick, Marty, Craig and their team 922 00:40:53,528 --> 00:40:55,725 have more scientific evidence 923 00:40:55,726 --> 00:40:58,329 that something of great importance took place 924 00:40:58,330 --> 00:41:03,000 on Oak Island long before the discovery of the Money Pit. 925 00:41:03,264 --> 00:41:05,593 But perhaps more importantly, 926 00:41:05,594 --> 00:41:08,329 they have evidence that something 927 00:41:08,330 --> 00:41:10,527 so valuable was brought here, 928 00:41:10,528 --> 00:41:13,329 it inspired the creation of a swamp 929 00:41:13,330 --> 00:41:14,330 to hide the evidence 930 00:41:14,331 --> 00:41:18,065 and a burial site so ingeniously engineered 931 00:41:18,066 --> 00:41:23,065 that it has eluded seekers for more than two centuries. 932 00:41:23,066 --> 00:41:25,131 The question now is 933 00:41:25,132 --> 00:41:27,527 how much longer can it elude Rick, 934 00:41:27,528 --> 00:41:32,363 Marty and the Fellowship of the Dig? 935 00:41:35,264 --> 00:41:38,131 Next time on The Curse of Oak Island... 936 00:41:38,132 --> 00:41:41,396 - Today could be the day. - We got a core. 937 00:41:42,000 --> 00:41:43,527 Oh, man. That’s cool. 938 00:41:43,528 --> 00:41:46,197 Were there certain boxes that would have that type 939 00:41:46,198 --> 00:41:48,659 - of sheeting on it? - Only for valuables. 940 00:41:48,660 --> 00:41:50,593 - Gary, what do you make of this? - Oh, yeah. 941 00:41:50,594 --> 00:41:52,758 We’re looking for a ship. That’s the type of find 942 00:41:52,759 --> 00:41:55,527 - you want to be pulling up. - We know 943 00:41:55,528 --> 00:41:57,362 that Phips found silver on the Concepción, 944 00:41:57,363 --> 00:41:58,330 and I believe 945 00:41:58,331 --> 00:42:00,197 some of the treasure from the Concepción 946 00:42:00,198 --> 00:42:02,131 - was secreted to Oak Island. - Wow. 947 00:42:02,132 --> 00:42:03,593 That is remarkable. 948 00:42:03,617 --> 00:42:05,617 >>>>oakislandtk<<<<< www.opensubtitles.org 67419

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