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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:03,503 --> 00:00:05,880 Whatever this is, it's been here a while. 2 00:00:05,881 --> 00:00:07,006 Ooh! 3 00:00:07,007 --> 00:00:08,382 It's an old ax‐head. 4 00:00:08,383 --> 00:00:10,593 This ax could be a weapon. 5 00:00:10,594 --> 00:00:13,137 That sample came out to be 1741. 6 00:00:13,138 --> 00:00:16,015 Whoa. What the hell does that fit with? 7 00:00:16,016 --> 00:00:17,433 The raids on Fortress Louisbourg. 8 00:00:17,434 --> 00:00:19,936 Oh! Rick, look at this one. 9 00:00:19,937 --> 00:00:21,354 A drain system. 10 00:00:21,355 --> 00:00:23,397 Looks like flood tunnel or box drains. 11 00:00:23,398 --> 00:00:26,192 Whoa! ‐Whoa. We're uncovering something here 12 00:00:26,193 --> 00:00:27,861 that people haven't seen for hundreds of years. 13 00:00:31,323 --> 00:00:34,992 There is an island in the North Atlantic 14 00:00:34,993 --> 00:00:38,329 where people have been looking for an incredible treasure 15 00:00:38,330 --> 00:00:41,707 for more than 200 years. 16 00:00:41,708 --> 00:00:44,794 So far, they have found a stone slab 17 00:00:44,795 --> 00:00:47,463 with strange symbols carved into it, 18 00:00:47,464 --> 00:00:50,341 mysterious fragments of human bone, 19 00:00:50,342 --> 00:00:54,011 and a lead cross whose origin may stretch back 20 00:00:54,012 --> 00:00:56,722 to the days of the Knights Templar. 21 00:00:56,723 --> 00:01:00,811 To date, six men have died trying to solve the mystery. 22 00:01:02,062 --> 00:01:04,188 And, according to legend, 23 00:01:04,189 --> 00:01:07,400 one more will have to die 24 00:01:07,401 --> 00:01:10,779 before the treasure can be found. 25 00:01:22,040 --> 00:01:23,791 Let's see what we've got. 26 00:01:23,792 --> 00:01:26,044 Huh. 27 00:01:28,297 --> 00:01:30,089 There's a lot of water in here. 28 00:01:30,090 --> 00:01:32,925 There certainly is. 29 00:01:32,926 --> 00:01:36,637 In the aftermath of a powerful hurricane 30 00:01:36,638 --> 00:01:40,683 which hit Oak Island and the surrounding region 31 00:01:40,684 --> 00:01:43,019 with winds of nearly 100 miles per hour, 32 00:01:43,020 --> 00:01:45,646 downing trees 33 00:01:45,647 --> 00:01:49,734 and causing structural damage across the island, 34 00:01:49,735 --> 00:01:52,820 brothers Rick and Marty Lagina 35 00:01:52,821 --> 00:01:54,947 are eagerly trying to put their search efforts 36 00:01:54,948 --> 00:01:56,949 back on track. 37 00:01:56,950 --> 00:02:00,745 Our excavation area was full, but we're making headway. 38 00:02:00,746 --> 00:02:02,163 I think we're still in good shape. 39 00:02:02,164 --> 00:02:04,165 I think we are, yep. 40 00:02:04,166 --> 00:02:07,460 Hurricane Dorian also completely filled 41 00:02:07,461 --> 00:02:09,920 the recently drained swamp with ocean water, 42 00:02:09,921 --> 00:02:12,423 thwarting the team's efforts to investigate 43 00:02:12,424 --> 00:02:14,467 the mysterious stone‐paved pathway 44 00:02:14,468 --> 00:02:17,303 that was discovered earlier this year. 45 00:02:17,304 --> 00:02:19,930 After the extensive pumping we did, 46 00:02:19,931 --> 00:02:22,600 we are currently back to square one in the swamp. 47 00:02:22,601 --> 00:02:25,102 That's problematic. We've got to drain it 48 00:02:25,103 --> 00:02:27,897 as quickly as we can and hope the weather holds. 49 00:02:27,898 --> 00:02:30,358 Just looking at it, Scott, I think that, you know, 50 00:02:30,359 --> 00:02:32,735 it‐it's gonna be wet no matter how long we wait. 51 00:02:32,736 --> 00:02:34,320 So, I think we're just gonna have 52 00:02:34,321 --> 00:02:36,364 to let this settle out and‐and pump down. 53 00:02:36,365 --> 00:02:39,533 I'd say, two to three days before we get in here. 54 00:02:39,534 --> 00:02:42,244 ‐A day or two will make a big difference here. ‐Yep. 55 00:02:42,245 --> 00:02:45,956 Uh, but the real impact is gonna be this place, really. 56 00:02:45,957 --> 00:02:47,667 ‐That paved area. That's right. 57 00:02:47,668 --> 00:02:49,460 So this is critical. 58 00:02:49,461 --> 00:02:51,253 If we can get this dry to the point where we can 59 00:02:51,254 --> 00:02:53,506 at least investigate a ten by 20 area, 60 00:02:53,507 --> 00:02:56,634 come to some understanding of what it may or may not be, 61 00:02:56,635 --> 00:02:58,552 whether it's natural or artificial. 62 00:02:58,553 --> 00:03:00,596 I agree with that. 63 00:03:00,597 --> 00:03:02,098 Every day is a new day. 64 00:03:02,099 --> 00:03:04,767 Do what we can and move forward. 65 00:03:04,768 --> 00:03:07,103 Yep. 66 00:03:07,104 --> 00:03:09,730 Later that same day, 67 00:03:09,731 --> 00:03:13,234 as the pumping operation at the Oak Island swamp continues... 68 00:03:13,235 --> 00:03:15,027 Hey. Hey, Craig. Hey, Craig. 69 00:03:15,028 --> 00:03:16,946 ‐ Hello, mate. Hey, guys. 70 00:03:16,947 --> 00:03:18,739 ...Rick and Marty gather with other members 71 00:03:18,740 --> 00:03:22,660 of their team for an important meeting in the war room. 72 00:03:22,661 --> 00:03:25,371 Joining them via videoconference 73 00:03:25,372 --> 00:03:28,541 is Rick and Marty's partner Craig Tester. 74 00:03:28,542 --> 00:03:32,211 Okay. So, you know, today is Marty's favorite day. 75 00:03:32,212 --> 00:03:34,588 ‐Yep. ‐Uh, it's about science and getting results. 76 00:03:34,589 --> 00:03:37,675 Um, Craig has some very interesting results, 77 00:03:37,676 --> 00:03:40,136 uh, about our work in Smith's Cove. 78 00:03:40,137 --> 00:03:43,222 And it's about dendrochronology, which I'm hoping 79 00:03:43,223 --> 00:03:45,433 that there'll be some really definitive answers here. 80 00:03:45,434 --> 00:03:47,102 ‐Yeah. ‐Yeah. 81 00:03:48,353 --> 00:03:49,937 Billy! 82 00:03:49,938 --> 00:03:51,939 We want to get a piece of dendro off of it 83 00:03:51,940 --> 00:03:53,941 for dendro testing. 84 00:03:53,942 --> 00:03:57,111 One week ago, after fully exposing 85 00:03:57,112 --> 00:03:59,989 a mysterious log structure in what has become known 86 00:03:59,990 --> 00:04:01,824 as the bump‐out area, 87 00:04:01,825 --> 00:04:04,618 the team obtained a large sample to be tested 88 00:04:04,619 --> 00:04:07,496 through a process known as dendrochronology... 89 00:04:07,497 --> 00:04:09,206 ‐Perfect! ‐There you go. 90 00:04:09,207 --> 00:04:11,917 ...which analyzes growth rings on wood 91 00:04:11,918 --> 00:04:15,254 in an effort to determine not only the age of a tree 92 00:04:15,255 --> 00:04:19,049 but also when it was cut for use in construction. 93 00:04:19,050 --> 00:04:22,052 It was this process that determined 94 00:04:22,053 --> 00:04:24,221 that the wooden slipway unearthed last year 95 00:04:24,222 --> 00:04:29,101 was most likely built in 1769, nearly three decades 96 00:04:29,102 --> 00:04:33,731 before the discovery of the original Money Pit in 1795. 97 00:04:33,732 --> 00:04:36,400 Now that the team has discovered 98 00:04:36,401 --> 00:04:38,861 an additional structure, they are eager to find out 99 00:04:38,862 --> 00:04:41,739 if it could have been built during the same period 100 00:04:41,740 --> 00:04:44,700 or perhaps even earlier. 101 00:04:44,701 --> 00:04:46,911 Fill us in and make us happy. 102 00:04:46,912 --> 00:04:50,247 Okay. Well, we had one sample that we, uh, 103 00:04:50,248 --> 00:04:52,500 sent to, uh, Colin Laroque 104 00:04:52,501 --> 00:04:54,877 to do the dendrochronology. 105 00:04:54,878 --> 00:04:57,546 He said it's a, uh, red spruce. 106 00:04:57,547 --> 00:04:59,840 Um... 107 00:04:59,841 --> 00:05:02,468 It's a little head‐scratcher. 108 00:05:02,469 --> 00:05:03,969 Uh‐oh. 109 00:05:03,970 --> 00:05:05,304 1741. 110 00:05:05,305 --> 00:05:06,722 ‐Whoa. 111 00:05:06,723 --> 00:05:09,767 1741? 112 00:05:09,768 --> 00:05:12,686 Is it possible that the structure was built 113 00:05:12,687 --> 00:05:15,731 more than two decades before the nearby slipway? 114 00:05:15,732 --> 00:05:17,525 Knock me upside the head with a fish. 115 00:05:17,526 --> 00:05:19,568 I mean, you know, it's just amazing. 116 00:05:19,569 --> 00:05:22,279 It's amazing. 1741 now? 117 00:05:22,280 --> 00:05:25,866 I'm surprised. I thought the‐the date 118 00:05:25,867 --> 00:05:28,077 would be contemporaneous with the U‐shaped structure. 119 00:05:28,078 --> 00:05:29,578 I really did. 120 00:05:29,579 --> 00:05:32,915 In 1741, there was virtually nobody. 121 00:05:32,916 --> 00:05:35,459 You know, if you look at the foundings of these towns, 122 00:05:35,460 --> 00:05:37,086 none of them are that old. 123 00:05:37,087 --> 00:05:39,880 What was going on here in 1741? 124 00:05:39,881 --> 00:05:42,842 According to historical records, 125 00:05:42,843 --> 00:05:48,305 prior to 1795, Oak Island was virtually uninhabited. 126 00:05:48,306 --> 00:05:51,809 Other than its occasional use by local farmers, 127 00:05:51,810 --> 00:05:54,812 who would ferry livestock over to the island 128 00:05:54,813 --> 00:05:56,814 so that they could graze without the need of fences, 129 00:05:56,815 --> 00:05:59,233 there were no reported activities 130 00:05:59,234 --> 00:06:01,735 that would require anything as elaborate as a large slipway 131 00:06:01,736 --> 00:06:03,612 or loading dock. 132 00:06:03,613 --> 00:06:07,324 Could it be that this log structure was built 133 00:06:07,325 --> 00:06:10,953 by the same mysterious visitors who constructed the Money Pit, 134 00:06:10,954 --> 00:06:14,373 perhaps for the purpose of unloading and burying something 135 00:06:14,374 --> 00:06:16,917 of great importance on the island? 136 00:06:16,918 --> 00:06:19,920 ‐I like those 1700s. ‐Whoa, though. 137 00:06:19,921 --> 00:06:22,506 What the hell does that fit with? 138 00:06:22,507 --> 00:06:24,717 ‐It's pushing it back further in time. ‐ Wow. 139 00:06:24,718 --> 00:06:27,761 What was happening here in '41? Not a lot, right? 140 00:06:27,762 --> 00:06:31,557 Well, there were the raids on Fortress Louisbourg. 141 00:06:31,558 --> 00:06:34,894 They‐they lost Fortress Louisbourg to the British 142 00:06:34,895 --> 00:06:36,854 before 1746. 143 00:06:36,855 --> 00:06:38,981 So, I mean, we could look closer at those dates, 144 00:06:38,982 --> 00:06:42,443 ‐because maybe the French had a need to hide something. ‐Yeah. 145 00:06:42,444 --> 00:06:44,653 Chipp Reid, who was a military historian, felt so, right? 146 00:06:44,654 --> 00:06:46,989 ‐Yeah. ‐ Oh, yeah. 147 00:06:46,990 --> 00:06:49,283 Earlier this year, 148 00:06:49,284 --> 00:06:51,910 naval historian and author Chipp Reid 149 00:06:51,911 --> 00:06:54,663 presented Rick, Marty, Craig and the team 150 00:06:54,664 --> 00:06:56,790 with an astonishing theory. 151 00:06:56,791 --> 00:06:59,376 One suggesting that the incredible structures 152 00:06:59,377 --> 00:07:02,212 uncovered at Smith's Cove could be connected 153 00:07:02,213 --> 00:07:05,090 to an early 18th‐century French fort 154 00:07:05,091 --> 00:07:07,885 located some 300 miles northeast of Oak Island 155 00:07:07,886 --> 00:07:11,639 and which contained similar features and tunnels. 156 00:07:11,640 --> 00:07:13,932 If we look at these structures, 157 00:07:13,933 --> 00:07:17,061 I don't know if this structure looks familiar in any way. 158 00:07:17,062 --> 00:07:18,937 Well, that's the L‐shaped structure. 159 00:07:18,938 --> 00:07:19,939 Yeah. 160 00:07:21,941 --> 00:07:24,151 It was Chipp Reid's belief 161 00:07:24,152 --> 00:07:27,071 that the French, while preparing for a British siege 162 00:07:27,072 --> 00:07:29,907 on Louisbourg in 1745, 163 00:07:29,908 --> 00:07:32,534 might have secretly moved a vast fortune 164 00:07:32,535 --> 00:07:35,496 in gold and riches to Oak Island for safekeeping. 165 00:07:35,497 --> 00:07:37,706 A fortune which, following their defeat, 166 00:07:37,707 --> 00:07:39,458 was never recovered. 167 00:07:39,459 --> 00:07:43,295 Could Craig Tester's news, that the wood sample 168 00:07:43,296 --> 00:07:47,966 dates back as far as the 1740s, provide scientific evidence 169 00:07:47,967 --> 00:07:50,469 that Chipp Reid's theory might be true? 170 00:07:50,470 --> 00:07:54,348 So, I think a trip to Fort Louisbourg can help us 171 00:07:54,349 --> 00:07:56,517 try to come to an understanding of what may have happened here. 172 00:07:56,518 --> 00:07:58,060 Yeah. That's what I'm thinking. 173 00:07:58,061 --> 00:08:00,562 So, the bump‐out was a success. 174 00:08:00,563 --> 00:08:02,106 We'd never have known this date. 175 00:08:02,107 --> 00:08:03,524 ‐That's true. ‐Never had guessed that. 176 00:08:03,525 --> 00:08:05,150 Yeah. ‐Yep. Oh, yeah. 177 00:08:05,151 --> 00:08:06,819 I mean, this is certainly the absolute 178 00:08:06,820 --> 00:08:10,072 earliest date we've ever had regarding any activity, 179 00:08:10,073 --> 00:08:11,407 other than the cross. 180 00:08:11,408 --> 00:08:13,992 Somebody can drop a coin 181 00:08:13,993 --> 00:08:15,869 ‐from a long time ago, but nobody dropped that log. ‐Exactly. 182 00:08:15,870 --> 00:08:18,706 ‐Exactly. ‐And it didn't fall down by itself 183 00:08:18,707 --> 00:08:20,833 and dig itself five feet in the ground, either. 184 00:08:23,336 --> 00:08:25,504 I've always said you have to look backwards 185 00:08:25,505 --> 00:08:28,048 in order to move forward, but we keep going deeper and deeper 186 00:08:28,049 --> 00:08:29,216 ‐in the weeds. 187 00:08:29,217 --> 00:08:31,885 Uh, I like it, okay? 188 00:08:31,886 --> 00:08:35,055 Because, remember, when we first stepped foot on here, I said, 189 00:08:35,056 --> 00:08:39,268 "Find me concrete evidence of substantial human activity." 190 00:08:39,269 --> 00:08:42,646 I said underground, but if you take the word underground out, 191 00:08:42,647 --> 00:08:44,565 prior to the discovery of the Money Pit, you know what? 192 00:08:44,566 --> 00:08:45,692 You did it. 193 00:08:47,944 --> 00:08:51,447 Something rather massive happened here, at least in 1741. 194 00:08:51,448 --> 00:08:53,907 For me, that's a big deal. 195 00:08:53,908 --> 00:08:55,993 For the longest time I thought maybe nothing happened here 196 00:08:55,994 --> 00:08:58,537 prior to 1795. 197 00:08:58,538 --> 00:09:01,331 I think it was a success, the way I look at it, 198 00:09:01,332 --> 00:09:04,293 because we got good data. 199 00:09:04,294 --> 00:09:06,879 And I'm happy that he thinks it was a success. 200 00:09:06,880 --> 00:09:10,924 ‐As deluded as he might be. ‐(both laugh) 201 00:09:10,925 --> 00:09:15,012 Let's deal with it, try and put it in context and move forward. 202 00:09:15,013 --> 00:09:17,056 Let's go. 203 00:09:17,057 --> 00:09:19,267 Yeah, see you, Craig. Thank you. 204 00:09:25,940 --> 00:09:28,692 As a new day begins on Oak Island, 205 00:09:28,693 --> 00:09:30,986 and as the team continues their efforts 206 00:09:30,987 --> 00:09:33,072 to re‐drain the swamp... 207 00:09:33,073 --> 00:09:34,615 We've got a nice day for the visit. 208 00:09:34,616 --> 00:09:35,949 Oh, it's beautiful. 209 00:09:35,950 --> 00:09:38,827 ...Rick Lagina and historian Doug Crowell 210 00:09:38,828 --> 00:09:41,955 are traveling some 300 miles northeast of Oak Island 211 00:09:41,956 --> 00:09:45,375 to the town of Louisbourg, Nova Scotia. 212 00:09:45,376 --> 00:09:48,378 They are eager to explore firsthand 213 00:09:48,379 --> 00:09:51,256 the 18th century French fortress which, 214 00:09:51,257 --> 00:09:54,093 according to naval historian and author Chipp Reid, 215 00:09:54,094 --> 00:09:56,553 has a direct connection to Oak Island 216 00:09:56,554 --> 00:10:00,432 and its 225‐year‐old treasure mystery. 217 00:10:00,433 --> 00:10:03,811 If there was French involvement on Oak Island, 218 00:10:03,812 --> 00:10:07,898 here we have some examples of their engineering underground. 219 00:10:07,899 --> 00:10:10,317 At the time the French had completed construction 220 00:10:10,318 --> 00:10:14,196 of the fortress at Louisbourg in 1740, 221 00:10:14,197 --> 00:10:16,115 it was considered a monument 222 00:10:16,116 --> 00:10:18,617 to 18th century military engineering, 223 00:10:18,618 --> 00:10:21,703 with over two miles of stone walls 224 00:10:21,704 --> 00:10:25,958 which were built as much as 30 feet high and eight feet thick. 225 00:10:25,959 --> 00:10:28,043 But perhaps one of the installation's 226 00:10:28,044 --> 00:10:29,795 most compelling features 227 00:10:29,796 --> 00:10:32,047 is the vast network of secret tunnels 228 00:10:32,048 --> 00:10:34,508 that were constructed beneath it, 229 00:10:34,509 --> 00:10:38,428 tunnels which Rick and Doug believe may contain 230 00:10:38,429 --> 00:10:40,889 design or construction similarities 231 00:10:40,890 --> 00:10:43,309 to those found on Oak Island. 232 00:10:45,353 --> 00:10:49,523 We now have two structures on the island that 233 00:10:49,524 --> 00:10:53,777 were quite laborious in terms of their construct, right? 234 00:10:53,778 --> 00:10:56,905 Louisbourg wasn't it started in 1713 235 00:10:56,906 --> 00:11:01,243 and then it falls in 1745? 236 00:11:01,244 --> 00:11:03,537 Well, when you look at the dates that we got 237 00:11:03,538 --> 00:11:05,289 through dendrochronology this year, 238 00:11:05,290 --> 00:11:07,082 like the, the end of the wharf area, 239 00:11:07,083 --> 00:11:08,250 the end of the slipway, 240 00:11:08,251 --> 00:11:09,835 dating to 1741, 241 00:11:09,836 --> 00:11:12,546 you're right in the heyday of Louisbourg. 242 00:11:12,547 --> 00:11:14,548 In fact, uh, I believe it was, uh, 243 00:11:14,549 --> 00:11:16,383 Jean‐Baptiste de La Rochefoucauld, 244 00:11:16,384 --> 00:11:17,926 ‐the Duc D'Anville. ‐Mm‐hmm. 245 00:11:17,927 --> 00:11:19,011 It was my understanding that's where 246 00:11:19,012 --> 00:11:20,679 the duc d'Anville is buried. 247 00:11:20,680 --> 00:11:21,972 That's interesting. 248 00:11:21,973 --> 00:11:24,224 It is. 249 00:11:24,225 --> 00:11:27,519 In 1746, 250 00:11:27,520 --> 00:11:32,900 one year after Louisbourg fell to British military forces, 251 00:11:32,901 --> 00:11:36,612 the French sent a massive armada to Nova Scotia 252 00:11:36,613 --> 00:11:40,616 in an attempt to seize back their conquered fortress. 253 00:11:40,617 --> 00:11:43,160 Led by the duc d'Anville, 254 00:11:43,161 --> 00:11:45,245 a member of the same Rochefoucauld family 255 00:11:45,246 --> 00:11:48,582 that boasted direct ties to the Knights Templar, 256 00:11:48,583 --> 00:11:52,461 the 97‐ship fleet was reportedly carrying 257 00:11:52,462 --> 00:11:54,671 a treasure in gold and jewels, 258 00:11:54,672 --> 00:11:58,467 presumably in order to finance a local army. 259 00:11:58,468 --> 00:12:00,886 Unfortunately, 260 00:12:00,887 --> 00:12:03,388 before the ambitious operation could be carried out, 261 00:12:03,389 --> 00:12:07,434 a series of severe storms delayed and plagued 262 00:12:07,435 --> 00:12:08,977 the doomed mission. 263 00:12:08,978 --> 00:12:12,189 Typhus and scurvy quickly spread 264 00:12:12,190 --> 00:12:14,149 among the soldiers and sailor, 265 00:12:14,150 --> 00:12:16,235 causing hundreds to die at se, 266 00:12:16,236 --> 00:12:19,947 including the duc d'Anville himself. 267 00:12:19,948 --> 00:12:22,491 I found eight pages of 268 00:12:22,492 --> 00:12:24,284 what looks like a ship's log. 269 00:12:24,285 --> 00:12:27,246 According to a recently discovered journal, 270 00:12:27,247 --> 00:12:29,581 the duke's crew, after his death, 271 00:12:29,582 --> 00:12:32,501 was able to hide the treasure he was carrying 272 00:12:32,502 --> 00:12:35,420 on a wooded island in Mahone Bay, 273 00:12:35,421 --> 00:12:38,173 in hopes of keeping it out of the hands of the British. 274 00:12:38,174 --> 00:12:40,509 "It has been agreed that a deep pit be dug. 275 00:12:40,510 --> 00:12:41,593 "The pit to have a secret entrance 276 00:12:41,594 --> 00:12:43,011 by a tunnel from the shore." 277 00:12:43,012 --> 00:12:44,846 I mean, a great quantity of treasure, 278 00:12:44,847 --> 00:12:48,475 and‐and that they appear to be in this bay. 279 00:12:48,476 --> 00:12:50,394 I mean, it fits in every aspect. 280 00:12:50,395 --> 00:12:51,645 Exactly. 281 00:12:51,646 --> 00:12:53,730 Could it be 282 00:12:53,731 --> 00:12:56,441 that the surviving members of the duc d'Anville's mission 283 00:12:56,442 --> 00:12:59,444 chose Oak Island not by accident 284 00:12:59,445 --> 00:13:02,072 but because they knew that a vast treasure vault 285 00:13:02,073 --> 00:13:04,283 had already been built there, 286 00:13:04,284 --> 00:13:07,577 one that was established centuries earlier by members 287 00:13:07,578 --> 00:13:09,371 of the Knights Templar? 288 00:13:09,372 --> 00:13:11,748 Louisbourg is a fascinating place, 289 00:13:11,749 --> 00:13:14,042 and there's incredible history there. 290 00:13:14,043 --> 00:13:16,253 Duc D'Anville is buried there, 291 00:13:16,254 --> 00:13:20,424 who may be part of a hypothetical reason 292 00:13:20,425 --> 00:13:23,010 as to what was done here on Oak Island. 293 00:13:23,011 --> 00:13:25,053 I mean, we're not that far away. 294 00:13:25,054 --> 00:13:28,140 I look forward to just actually just seeing it. 295 00:13:28,141 --> 00:13:29,474 Yes. 296 00:13:29,475 --> 00:13:30,684 I hope there's some answers here. 297 00:13:30,685 --> 00:13:33,228 ‐That's my hope. ‐ Yeah. 298 00:13:33,229 --> 00:13:36,648 As Rick and Doug continue their journey to Louisbourg... 299 00:13:36,649 --> 00:13:39,026 All right, here's Lot 27. 300 00:13:39,027 --> 00:13:40,444 Yup. 301 00:13:40,445 --> 00:13:42,529 ...Jack Begley, Peter Fornett, 302 00:13:42,530 --> 00:13:45,490 and metal detection expert Gary Drayton 303 00:13:45,491 --> 00:13:49,828 continue to search for clues on Oak Island's Lot 27. 304 00:13:49,829 --> 00:13:52,205 All right, mate. I've got my magic wand. 305 00:13:52,206 --> 00:13:53,166 Let's make some magic. 306 00:13:56,127 --> 00:13:58,378 Look at that! Look at the size of that. 307 00:13:58,379 --> 00:13:59,588 That's chunky. 308 00:13:59,589 --> 00:14:02,507 Yeah. An hefty chisel. 309 00:14:02,508 --> 00:14:06,094 It was on this same lot, seven weeks ago, 310 00:14:06,095 --> 00:14:07,637 that Gary, Jack, and Peter 311 00:14:07,638 --> 00:14:09,931 discovered what was later identified 312 00:14:09,932 --> 00:14:12,350 as an ancient chisel 313 00:14:12,351 --> 00:14:15,479 a chisel that Gary believes could be connected 314 00:14:15,480 --> 00:14:17,731 to the 14th century tunneling tools, 315 00:14:17,732 --> 00:14:21,693 known as swages, that were found on Lot 21. 316 00:14:21,694 --> 00:14:24,988 Because the recent hurricane battered and stirred up 317 00:14:24,989 --> 00:14:26,531 the island's surface, 318 00:14:26,532 --> 00:14:29,534 Gary is eager to search the area once again, 319 00:14:29,535 --> 00:14:32,162 in the hopes of finding any newly exposed clues 320 00:14:32,163 --> 00:14:34,372 or valuable artifacts. 321 00:14:34,373 --> 00:14:36,166 All right, here's a good place to start. 322 00:14:36,167 --> 00:14:37,667 Okay. 323 00:14:37,668 --> 00:14:41,589 We're here to find some good stuff. 324 00:14:46,094 --> 00:14:50,055 Hmm. Nothing in here. 325 00:14:52,558 --> 00:14:54,309 You don't want to go for it? ‐ No. 326 00:14:54,310 --> 00:14:58,355 Not feeling any love at the moment. 327 00:14:59,982 --> 00:15:01,358 Got something? ‐ Yeah. 328 00:15:01,359 --> 00:15:03,735 This is a nice repeatable signal. 329 00:15:03,736 --> 00:15:06,780 ‐Got to dig that, mate. 330 00:15:11,577 --> 00:15:12,536 It's out. 331 00:15:18,793 --> 00:15:22,004 Whatever it is, it's out. 332 00:15:23,923 --> 00:15:26,091 ‐Ooh. 333 00:15:26,092 --> 00:15:28,468 It's in me hand. 334 00:15:28,469 --> 00:15:30,804 What have we got here? 335 00:15:30,805 --> 00:15:33,306 That is nice. 336 00:15:33,307 --> 00:15:35,767 ‐A bit of cut lead. ‐Hmm. 337 00:15:35,768 --> 00:15:39,479 It's always good when you find cut lead on old sites. 338 00:15:39,480 --> 00:15:41,606 Let's have a gander. 339 00:15:41,607 --> 00:15:43,859 What's that little knob for? 340 00:15:43,860 --> 00:15:45,485 Yeah, that little knob reminds me of a sprue. 341 00:15:45,486 --> 00:15:47,863 When they make musket balls, 342 00:15:47,864 --> 00:15:50,615 they would pour 'em in a mold, 343 00:15:50,616 --> 00:15:52,826 and then they would snip all the musket balls off 344 00:15:52,827 --> 00:15:55,871 on the line, and this would've just got thrown away. 345 00:15:55,872 --> 00:15:56,997 ‐Mm‐hmm. ‐ It's old. 346 00:15:56,998 --> 00:15:59,125 It's 17s, early 1800s. 347 00:16:00,710 --> 00:16:02,711 A musket ball? 348 00:16:02,712 --> 00:16:06,256 Dating as far back as the 1700s? 349 00:16:06,257 --> 00:16:08,216 Is it possible that the team has just found 350 00:16:08,217 --> 00:16:10,552 another piece of physical evidence 351 00:16:10,553 --> 00:16:13,638 supporting Chipp Reid's theory about the French military 352 00:16:13,639 --> 00:16:18,476 burying treasure on Oak Island in the early 1740s? 353 00:16:18,477 --> 00:16:21,813 Maybe there was some sort of military force on Oak Island. 354 00:16:21,814 --> 00:16:23,899 We know that there were French here, 355 00:16:23,900 --> 00:16:26,443 so maybe we'll find more evidence in the area 356 00:16:26,444 --> 00:16:28,820 to be able to pin down exactly who it was. 357 00:16:28,821 --> 00:16:31,406 All right, chaps. Let's see what's on the beach. 358 00:16:31,407 --> 00:16:34,201 Okay. We will follow you. 359 00:16:34,202 --> 00:16:36,828 Nice, low tide. 360 00:16:36,829 --> 00:16:39,039 There's a lot of the lower beach exposed. 361 00:16:39,040 --> 00:16:40,498 This looks good. 362 00:16:40,499 --> 00:16:42,877 I'm gonna start zigzagging down here. 363 00:16:55,431 --> 00:16:57,015 ‐Just there. ‐That sounds fairly good. 364 00:16:57,016 --> 00:16:58,308 Yep. Just there. 365 00:16:58,309 --> 00:17:00,061 Yeah. It doesn't sound too bad. 366 00:17:02,939 --> 00:17:05,899 Whatever this is, it's been here a while. 367 00:17:05,900 --> 00:17:07,776 Yep. 368 00:17:07,777 --> 00:17:09,611 You got that right, Jack. That deep? 369 00:17:09,612 --> 00:17:11,780 That's gone undetected. 370 00:17:11,781 --> 00:17:13,281 A lot of rust. ‐ Ooh. 371 00:17:13,282 --> 00:17:14,866 I like the look of that. 372 00:17:14,867 --> 00:17:18,787 Take it real easy, mate. Oh, my God. 373 00:17:18,788 --> 00:17:20,330 I like the look of this. 374 00:17:20,331 --> 00:17:22,290 Look. You see what I'm seeing? 375 00:17:22,291 --> 00:17:24,709 I'm gonna have to get down and dirty on this one, mate. 376 00:17:24,710 --> 00:17:25,794 All right. 377 00:17:25,795 --> 00:17:28,297 Let's scrape some stuff off. 378 00:17:29,590 --> 00:17:31,425 This could be a good one. 379 00:17:33,344 --> 00:17:35,303 Watch your fingers. It could be sharp. 380 00:17:35,304 --> 00:17:37,597 ‐Look at that. ‐Yeah. 381 00:17:37,598 --> 00:17:38,765 What the heck is that? 382 00:17:38,766 --> 00:17:40,433 Is that it? 383 00:17:40,434 --> 00:17:42,477 Wow. 384 00:17:42,478 --> 00:17:45,105 It's an encrusted conglomerate. 385 00:17:45,106 --> 00:17:46,982 So, there's something inside of that mass? 386 00:17:46,983 --> 00:17:49,651 Yeah. That's nice. 387 00:17:49,652 --> 00:17:51,612 And who knows what's in this? 388 00:17:58,160 --> 00:18:01,288 Oh, what's that? ‐ It's just a big conglomerate. 389 00:18:01,289 --> 00:18:03,456 Mm‐hmm. ‐ It could be anything in there. 390 00:18:03,457 --> 00:18:05,375 While exploring the beach on Lot 27, 391 00:18:05,376 --> 00:18:07,711 metal detection expert Gary Drayton, 392 00:18:07,712 --> 00:18:10,380 along with Jack Begley and Peter Fornetti, 393 00:18:10,381 --> 00:18:13,633 have just made what could be an important discovery. 394 00:18:13,634 --> 00:18:16,553 You never know what's in something like this. 395 00:18:16,554 --> 00:18:19,097 That's why it's called an encrusted object. 396 00:18:19,098 --> 00:18:21,600 And what happens is, in a saltwater environment, 397 00:18:21,601 --> 00:18:23,727 all the sand and the shells, 398 00:18:23,728 --> 00:18:26,938 they become encrusted onto the piece of iron. 399 00:18:26,939 --> 00:18:29,649 The salvage guys love these on the shipwrecks, 400 00:18:29,650 --> 00:18:34,487 because they bring 'em up, and they find gold and silver, 401 00:18:34,488 --> 00:18:38,408 mainly coins, attached to the iron object. 402 00:18:38,409 --> 00:18:41,453 And that looks to me like an artifact. 403 00:18:41,454 --> 00:18:43,455 Oh, look. I can see the shape of it. 404 00:18:43,456 --> 00:18:44,956 ‐That's an old ax. Ax. Mm‐hmm. 405 00:18:44,957 --> 00:18:47,083 And that could be an old ax, as well. 406 00:18:47,084 --> 00:18:48,376 And you know what? 407 00:18:48,377 --> 00:18:50,462 Yeah. 408 00:18:50,463 --> 00:18:54,883 ‐This could be either a tool or a weapon. Mm‐hmm. 409 00:18:54,884 --> 00:18:56,134 ‐And you're right, it goes... ‐Yeah. 410 00:18:56,135 --> 00:18:57,218 ‐Yeah, it's an old ax‐head. ‐Look at that. 411 00:18:57,219 --> 00:18:58,219 ‐Wow. ‐Yeah, and that looks 412 00:18:58,220 --> 00:18:59,804 like an oldie, as well. 413 00:18:59,805 --> 00:19:02,432 This is 1700s, baby. 414 00:19:02,433 --> 00:19:05,727 ‐Could it be older than 1700? ‐ It really could. 415 00:19:05,728 --> 00:19:07,854 This could be older than 1700s. 416 00:19:07,855 --> 00:19:12,108 ‐Could be, for example, a ship's rigging ax. ‐Yeah. 417 00:19:12,109 --> 00:19:14,110 A rigging ax? 418 00:19:14,111 --> 00:19:16,404 Dating back to the early 18th century, 419 00:19:16,405 --> 00:19:18,031 or even older? 420 00:19:18,032 --> 00:19:21,826 Commonly kept on board large sailing vessels, 421 00:19:21,827 --> 00:19:25,121 a rigging ax was used for everyday maintenance 422 00:19:25,122 --> 00:19:27,123 and safety while at sea, 423 00:19:27,124 --> 00:19:29,042 as well as to gather new materials 424 00:19:29,043 --> 00:19:31,336 for construction when ashore. 425 00:19:31,337 --> 00:19:34,047 Could this rigging ax be evidence of a ship 426 00:19:34,048 --> 00:19:35,799 landing on the island prior 427 00:19:35,800 --> 00:19:38,927 to the Money Pit's discovery in 1795? 428 00:19:38,928 --> 00:19:42,764 If so, could it be connected to the massive wooden wharf 429 00:19:42,765 --> 00:19:45,100 recently unearthed at Smith's Cove, 430 00:19:45,101 --> 00:19:46,726 which was scientifically proven 431 00:19:46,727 --> 00:19:50,398 to have been built in 1741? 432 00:19:51,232 --> 00:19:53,066 That's nice. 433 00:19:53,067 --> 00:19:54,819 ‐Let's stick her in the bag, mate. ‐Yeah. 434 00:19:55,945 --> 00:19:58,321 All right. Awesome. 435 00:19:58,322 --> 00:19:59,823 Let's keep moving. 436 00:19:59,824 --> 00:20:02,117 As Gary, Jack, and Peter 437 00:20:02,118 --> 00:20:05,454 continue their search for artifacts on Lot 27... 438 00:20:08,708 --> 00:20:12,419 ...some 300 miles northeast of Oak Island... 439 00:20:12,420 --> 00:20:13,837 Pretty impressive. 440 00:20:13,838 --> 00:20:17,298 ...Rick Lagina and historian Doug Crowell 441 00:20:17,299 --> 00:20:18,633 arrive in the town of Louisbourg 442 00:20:18,634 --> 00:20:20,260 to visit the site of what was once 443 00:20:20,261 --> 00:20:22,429 a French military fortress. 444 00:20:22,430 --> 00:20:24,097 Hey, Sarah! 445 00:20:24,098 --> 00:20:25,640 Hello. 446 00:20:25,641 --> 00:20:26,725 Good to meet you in person. 447 00:20:26,726 --> 00:20:27,809 Great to meet you in person, too. 448 00:20:27,810 --> 00:20:29,102 Welcome to the Fortress of Louisbourg 449 00:20:29,103 --> 00:20:31,104 National Historic Site. 450 00:20:31,105 --> 00:20:33,648 Assisting Rick and Doug in their investigation 451 00:20:33,649 --> 00:20:35,358 is historian Sarah MacInnes. 452 00:20:35,359 --> 00:20:36,276 It's a beautiful edifice. 453 00:20:36,277 --> 00:20:38,111 It's just, uh... 454 00:20:38,112 --> 00:20:39,988 awe‐inspiring. It's absolutely stunning. 455 00:20:39,989 --> 00:20:41,698 It's really, really, phenomenally gorgeous. 456 00:20:41,699 --> 00:20:43,491 ‐ Yes. ‐ Yeah. 457 00:20:43,492 --> 00:20:45,660 And what you see here is actually only one‐fifth 458 00:20:45,661 --> 00:20:48,455 of what it originally was in the 18th century. 459 00:20:48,456 --> 00:20:49,956 Wow. 460 00:20:49,957 --> 00:20:52,000 Sarah, we have, uh, 461 00:20:52,001 --> 00:20:52,959 some questions that we're trying to answer 462 00:20:52,960 --> 00:20:54,753 on the island. 463 00:20:54,754 --> 00:20:57,088 Over the last couple years, we've uncovered some structures. 464 00:20:57,089 --> 00:20:59,924 ‐Mm‐hmm. ‐And we've had a naval historian tell us 465 00:20:59,925 --> 00:21:03,219 that perhaps they're temporary siege works, of sorts. 466 00:21:03,220 --> 00:21:05,180 So, we were hoping perhaps we'd find something 467 00:21:05,181 --> 00:21:07,640 of a similar nature here. 468 00:21:07,641 --> 00:21:10,268 ‐And we understand you have some tunnels under the fort. ‐Mm‐hmm. 469 00:21:10,269 --> 00:21:13,938 And tunnels under... underground are of big interest to us. 470 00:21:13,939 --> 00:21:16,816 And we're hoping to find something that might be similar. 471 00:21:16,817 --> 00:21:18,151 Well, hopefully, we can find some answers for you. 472 00:21:18,152 --> 00:21:20,153 Ah, that'd be great. 473 00:21:20,154 --> 00:21:22,030 ‐That'd be fantastic. ‐You know what I'd love to do first, 474 00:21:22,031 --> 00:21:23,907 though? I'd love to see where the duc d'Anville is buried. 475 00:21:23,908 --> 00:21:26,326 ‐All right, let's go see him first. ‐All right. 476 00:21:26,327 --> 00:21:27,744 These people, 477 00:21:27,745 --> 00:21:29,621 long ago, were committed 478 00:21:29,622 --> 00:21:31,581 to building this on such a large scale. 479 00:21:31,582 --> 00:21:33,750 They did it because they had to, 480 00:21:33,751 --> 00:21:36,795 and that's the key enigma of Oak Island. 481 00:21:36,796 --> 00:21:38,296 Sometimes you think, 482 00:21:38,297 --> 00:21:40,048 oh, you know, they couldn't have gone down 483 00:21:40,049 --> 00:21:41,841 to the bedrock in the Money Pit area. 484 00:21:41,842 --> 00:21:43,426 They couldn't have tunneled to Smith's Cove. 485 00:21:43,427 --> 00:21:45,720 And then you look at this, and you realize 486 00:21:45,721 --> 00:21:47,889 it is possible. 487 00:21:47,890 --> 00:21:49,933 We'll go into the chapel now. 488 00:21:49,934 --> 00:21:51,976 This is where the duc d'Anville has been buried. 489 00:21:51,977 --> 00:21:53,813 Wow. 490 00:21:55,356 --> 00:21:57,482 In 1749, 491 00:21:57,483 --> 00:21:59,526 after Louisbourg was returned to the French, 492 00:21:59,527 --> 00:22:01,653 the English took the duc d'Anville, 493 00:22:01,654 --> 00:22:04,364 who was previously buried in what's now Halifax Harbour, 494 00:22:04,365 --> 00:22:06,366 and sent his remains here. 495 00:22:06,367 --> 00:22:08,661 And they were interred under the altar of the chapel. 496 00:22:11,997 --> 00:22:15,333 "De la Rochefoucauld" is the last word. 497 00:22:15,334 --> 00:22:18,461 The Rochefoucauld family has been of interest to us 498 00:22:18,462 --> 00:22:21,506 the last couple of years because of some other documents 499 00:22:21,507 --> 00:22:23,550 we've been looking at on the island. We're tracing 500 00:22:23,551 --> 00:22:25,134 some possibilities that that family 501 00:22:25,135 --> 00:22:27,220 may have had some of the answers 502 00:22:27,221 --> 00:22:29,556 ‐for which we seek. ‐Hmm. 503 00:22:29,557 --> 00:22:32,642 Not only was the duc d'Anville a member 504 00:22:32,643 --> 00:22:34,894 of the Rochefoucauld family, which, in turn, 505 00:22:34,895 --> 00:22:38,481 had close associates with members of the Knights Templar, 506 00:22:38,482 --> 00:22:41,734 but the name Rochefoucauld is also featured 507 00:22:41,735 --> 00:22:45,864 on a mysterious 14th century map of Oak Island. 508 00:22:45,865 --> 00:22:48,241 Given to Rick Lagina by his close friend, 509 00:22:48,242 --> 00:22:51,244 the late author and researcher Zena Halpern, 510 00:22:51,245 --> 00:22:54,706 it is one of three maps that were found in an ancient book 511 00:22:54,707 --> 00:22:57,083 and which suggest that the Rochefoucaulds were, 512 00:22:57,084 --> 00:23:01,421 in some way, directly connected to the Oak Island mystery. 513 00:23:01,422 --> 00:23:04,799 So, is there a crypt beneath here that is accessible? 514 00:23:04,800 --> 00:23:06,175 Yeah. It's not a crypt 515 00:23:06,176 --> 00:23:08,011 as, uh, many people would think of it, 516 00:23:08,012 --> 00:23:10,305 but there are a number of burials underneath the chapel. 517 00:23:10,306 --> 00:23:11,806 One of the things we were 518 00:23:11,807 --> 00:23:14,851 hoping to find or see some original works, 519 00:23:14,852 --> 00:23:17,103 so that we could see it as it was built in the time. 520 00:23:17,104 --> 00:23:18,730 Is there anything like that here? 521 00:23:18,731 --> 00:23:20,273 ‐ Definitely. Yeah. ‐That'd be great. 522 00:23:20,274 --> 00:23:22,026 Let's go. 523 00:23:25,571 --> 00:23:28,281 So, the casemates were constructed to protect civilians 524 00:23:28,282 --> 00:23:30,283 during times of war. 525 00:23:30,284 --> 00:23:32,118 And they were one of the only structures 526 00:23:32,119 --> 00:23:35,079 that remained standing after the British destroyed 527 00:23:35,080 --> 00:23:39,125 the Fortress of Louisbourg between 1760 and 1768. 528 00:23:39,126 --> 00:23:40,585 So, these are the ones. 529 00:23:40,586 --> 00:23:42,629 You can get an idea of the construction. 530 00:23:42,630 --> 00:23:44,464 Oh, Rick. 531 00:23:44,465 --> 00:23:45,716 Come look at this one. 532 00:23:47,009 --> 00:23:48,969 What's your impression of that? 533 00:23:52,348 --> 00:23:54,891 A drain system. 534 00:23:54,892 --> 00:23:57,810 Yeah, that's what caught my eye, Rick. 535 00:23:57,811 --> 00:23:59,687 Look at that. 536 00:23:59,688 --> 00:24:01,147 Look at that. 537 00:24:01,148 --> 00:24:03,191 Oh. Yeah. 538 00:24:05,527 --> 00:24:08,237 Now, we were talking earlier about controlling the water. 539 00:24:08,238 --> 00:24:10,907 It goes into the dry moat. 540 00:24:10,908 --> 00:24:13,576 A stone drain system? 541 00:24:13,577 --> 00:24:15,119 Could Rick and Doug be looking 542 00:24:15,120 --> 00:24:17,664 at the same kind of water‐flow system 543 00:24:17,665 --> 00:24:19,916 that the Oak Island team has found evidence of 544 00:24:19,917 --> 00:24:23,086 over the past three years at Smith's Cove? 545 00:24:23,087 --> 00:24:27,632 A water‐flow system known as a French drain. 546 00:24:27,633 --> 00:24:30,301 It's certainly one way to run water off, that's for sure. 547 00:24:30,302 --> 00:24:31,844 This is very cool. 548 00:24:31,845 --> 00:24:33,388 I can't wait to see what you show us next. 549 00:24:35,307 --> 00:24:37,141 All right. Let's go look at that fortification 550 00:24:37,142 --> 00:24:38,726 ‐that you were wondering about. ‐ Excellent. 551 00:24:38,727 --> 00:24:41,771 I just found it exceedingly strange 552 00:24:41,772 --> 00:24:46,442 that the‐the drain system in the original fortifications, 553 00:24:46,443 --> 00:24:49,362 they certainly have an appearance 554 00:24:49,363 --> 00:24:53,491 of some of the structures that we saw in Smith's Cove. 555 00:24:53,492 --> 00:24:57,203 I just found that more than interesting. 556 00:24:57,204 --> 00:24:59,664 So, the countermine tunnel was constructed 557 00:24:59,665 --> 00:25:01,958 as a means of defending the fortress. 558 00:25:01,959 --> 00:25:05,003 So, it's that red door down there. 559 00:25:05,004 --> 00:25:06,796 It was made so that it could be filled with powder, 560 00:25:06,797 --> 00:25:08,464 and if the enemies were approaching, 561 00:25:08,465 --> 00:25:11,802 the powder could explode and cut off enemy attack. 562 00:25:15,389 --> 00:25:19,475 Dating back as early as the ninth century BC, 563 00:25:19,476 --> 00:25:22,228 countermines were a kind of defensive tunnel 564 00:25:22,229 --> 00:25:24,355 commonly utilized in warfare 565 00:25:24,356 --> 00:25:27,191 for the purpose of preventing enemy attempts 566 00:25:27,192 --> 00:25:30,778 to dig beneath walls or other fortifications. 567 00:25:30,779 --> 00:25:33,531 These countermine tunnels would often be rigged 568 00:25:33,532 --> 00:25:36,826 with booby traps, such as explosive powder. 569 00:25:36,827 --> 00:25:38,995 Unfortunately, we can't go in 570 00:25:38,996 --> 00:25:41,080 because it's home to a bat colony right now, 571 00:25:41,081 --> 00:25:43,583 but one neat thing about the countermine tunnel 572 00:25:43,584 --> 00:25:45,877 is that it's one of the only features that's still 573 00:25:45,878 --> 00:25:49,547 in the same condition that it was from the 18th century. 574 00:25:49,548 --> 00:25:52,550 It was never destroyed, and it hasn't been reconstructed. 575 00:25:52,551 --> 00:25:54,719 ‐So it's stuck in time. ‐ Oh, really? 576 00:25:54,720 --> 00:25:57,180 It's a lot of work, when you think about it, 577 00:25:57,181 --> 00:25:59,098 because the land's really marshy. 578 00:25:59,099 --> 00:26:00,683 It's a good ways out. 579 00:26:00,684 --> 00:26:03,811 So, underground then, when they built it, 580 00:26:03,812 --> 00:26:05,980 they had to have a way to manipulate the water? 581 00:26:05,981 --> 00:26:07,148 They had to deal with that, yeah. 582 00:26:07,149 --> 00:26:08,941 A tunnel? 583 00:26:08,942 --> 00:26:12,570 One that was built through a marshy waterway? 584 00:26:12,571 --> 00:26:15,239 Could it be that the same engineering knowledge 585 00:26:15,240 --> 00:26:17,241 used to build the countermine tunnel 586 00:26:17,242 --> 00:26:19,327 in the surrounding swamp at Louisbourg 587 00:26:19,328 --> 00:26:21,704 was also employed in the construction 588 00:26:21,705 --> 00:26:23,498 of Oak Island's elaborate network 589 00:26:23,499 --> 00:26:25,500 of booby‐trapped flood tunnel? 590 00:26:25,501 --> 00:26:27,794 It's what we're constantly amazed at 591 00:26:27,795 --> 00:26:29,337 on the work on Oak Island, right? 592 00:26:29,338 --> 00:26:31,172 All the tunneling, all the shafts. 593 00:26:31,173 --> 00:26:33,674 I mean, the amount of work. You know, a tunnel is a tunnel. 594 00:26:33,675 --> 00:26:36,010 Digging underground is digging underground. 595 00:26:36,011 --> 00:26:37,929 It'd be interesting to see the plans. 596 00:26:37,930 --> 00:26:40,848 We can definitely look into some plans if you're interested. 597 00:26:40,849 --> 00:26:43,059 Yeah. Be very interested. 598 00:26:43,060 --> 00:26:45,145 ‐ Well, let's head out. ‐Great. 599 00:26:50,275 --> 00:26:52,318 We pulled some plans that we thought you'd be interested in. 600 00:26:52,319 --> 00:26:54,654 And these actually show the countermine tunnel. 601 00:26:54,655 --> 00:26:57,073 While visiting a nearly 300‐year‐old 602 00:26:57,074 --> 00:27:00,243 French naval fortress in Louisbourg, Nova Scotia, 603 00:27:00,244 --> 00:27:04,330 Rick Lagina and Doug Crowell have been given the opportunity 604 00:27:04,331 --> 00:27:07,875 to examine not only the actual plans of the fort 605 00:27:07,876 --> 00:27:11,587 but also the system of tunnels that exists beneath it. 606 00:27:11,588 --> 00:27:16,134 So, the countermine tunnel is 180 feet out 607 00:27:16,135 --> 00:27:17,845 and it's in the shape of a cross. 608 00:27:20,180 --> 00:27:22,515 We thought that was fairly interesting. 609 00:27:22,516 --> 00:27:25,226 We have a cross on Oak Island... Nolan's cross. 610 00:27:25,227 --> 00:27:27,812 ‐Mm‐hmm. ‐Which is a‐a collection 611 00:27:27,813 --> 00:27:33,860 of precisely arranged boulders to form a‐a cross. 612 00:27:33,861 --> 00:27:37,905 Tunnels, laid out in the shape of a cross? 613 00:27:37,906 --> 00:27:40,366 Have Rick and Doug just found 614 00:27:40,367 --> 00:27:43,244 their first piece of concrete evidence connecting 615 00:27:43,245 --> 00:27:47,123 this 18th century French fort to Oak Island, 616 00:27:47,124 --> 00:27:50,376 and more specifically, to the megalithic structure, 617 00:27:50,377 --> 00:27:55,047 discovered in 1981, known as Nolan's Cross? 618 00:27:55,048 --> 00:27:58,551 But you don't know if there's an engineer drawing of the tunnel? 619 00:27:58,552 --> 00:28:01,304 It's at, like, a side? No. 620 00:28:01,305 --> 00:28:04,098 Not that we know of. But there are some images. 621 00:28:04,099 --> 00:28:06,601 ‐Oh, there are? ‐Yeah. 622 00:28:06,602 --> 00:28:14,150 So, it's hard to tell because of the flooding. 623 00:28:14,151 --> 00:28:16,777 That's cool. 624 00:28:16,778 --> 00:28:19,280 Beautifully done. 625 00:28:19,281 --> 00:28:22,199 ‐Oh, it's gorgeous. ‐Mm‐hmm. 626 00:28:22,200 --> 00:28:25,077 And to do that for 180 feet. 627 00:28:25,078 --> 00:28:27,538 That's a significant... 628 00:28:27,539 --> 00:28:29,290 ‐Straight as an arrow. ‐Mm‐hmm. 629 00:28:29,291 --> 00:28:31,375 ‐Math comes back into it, again. 630 00:28:31,376 --> 00:28:34,045 Yeah, we've always, we've always wondered, you know, like, 631 00:28:34,046 --> 00:28:35,880 the tunnels that are on Oak Island, 632 00:28:35,881 --> 00:28:38,841 how were they able to do that straight as an arrow? 633 00:28:38,842 --> 00:28:40,676 I suppose it just depends 634 00:28:40,677 --> 00:28:42,929 on the time and precision you want to put into it. 635 00:28:42,930 --> 00:28:47,266 But that goes to command and control, 636 00:28:47,267 --> 00:28:51,145 because look what was achieved here. 637 00:28:51,146 --> 00:28:53,648 Visiting Louisbourg was exceedingly interesting. 638 00:28:53,649 --> 00:28:57,276 They were able to manipulate water underground, 639 00:28:57,277 --> 00:28:59,696 i.e. specifically to create that tunnel. 640 00:29:00,948 --> 00:29:03,366 So... what did they know? 641 00:29:03,367 --> 00:29:07,995 How did they come to learn of it, i.e. moving water? 642 00:29:07,996 --> 00:29:09,413 They certainly were able to do it. 643 00:29:09,414 --> 00:29:11,582 Could be done here on the island. 644 00:29:11,583 --> 00:29:13,542 Well, we don't want to take up any more of your time. 645 00:29:13,543 --> 00:29:15,461 You've given us some great takeaways. 646 00:29:15,462 --> 00:29:17,797 There's a tunnel right out here that says you can 647 00:29:17,798 --> 00:29:22,093 drive a tunnel in a wet environment and keep it dry. 648 00:29:22,094 --> 00:29:23,552 That's interesting. 649 00:29:23,553 --> 00:29:24,887 Thank you, guys, for coming. 650 00:29:24,888 --> 00:29:26,640 Can't thank you enough. 651 00:29:32,646 --> 00:29:36,232 One day after his visit to Louisbourg... 652 00:29:36,233 --> 00:29:38,150 This is the paved area, right there, where Billy's digging. 653 00:29:38,151 --> 00:29:40,111 Mm‐hmm. 654 00:29:40,112 --> 00:29:42,613 ...Rick Lagina and his nephew Alex 655 00:29:42,614 --> 00:29:44,533 arrive at the triangle‐shaped swamp. 656 00:29:46,493 --> 00:29:49,036 Now that the area has once again been drained 657 00:29:49,037 --> 00:29:52,623 to the point where it is now safe to begin excavating, 658 00:29:52,624 --> 00:29:55,209 they are eager to resume this year's plan 659 00:29:55,210 --> 00:29:58,045 to fully reveal the mysterious stone‐paved walkway 660 00:29:58,046 --> 00:29:59,881 discovered earlier this year. 661 00:30:01,591 --> 00:30:03,175 Hey, Bill! 662 00:30:03,176 --> 00:30:05,011 You know, Dr. Spooner's 663 00:30:05,012 --> 00:30:06,971 gonna want to come out and take a look at it. 664 00:30:06,972 --> 00:30:08,973 ‐Yeah. ‐As you dig, 665 00:30:08,974 --> 00:30:11,225 maybe you might want to swing some of it over there? 666 00:30:11,226 --> 00:30:13,185 Yeah, this one pile is already there. 667 00:30:13,186 --> 00:30:14,770 ‐It's dry. ‐All right. 668 00:30:14,771 --> 00:30:18,190 How deep do you want to dig here? 669 00:30:18,191 --> 00:30:20,944 ‐ I say we dig until we can't dig any deeper. ‐Yeah. 670 00:30:23,530 --> 00:30:25,948 Because the recent hurricane 671 00:30:25,949 --> 00:30:28,659 has significantly stirred up the bottom of the swamp 672 00:30:28,660 --> 00:30:32,413 and, once again, buried the possible stone walkway, 673 00:30:32,414 --> 00:30:34,665 the team will have to carefully drench out 674 00:30:34,666 --> 00:30:37,376 several feet of water and muck without damaging the structure. 675 00:30:37,377 --> 00:30:40,004 I have to remove myself. 676 00:30:40,005 --> 00:30:41,505 I've got another, uh, errand to run, 677 00:30:41,506 --> 00:30:44,383 so you'll be Billy's eyes and boots. 678 00:30:44,384 --> 00:30:46,761 ‐ Okay. ‐Anything you see that might be 679 00:30:46,762 --> 00:30:48,637 ‐"out of the ordinary..." ‐Yep. 680 00:30:48,638 --> 00:30:50,306 If I stop us down, I'll call you. 681 00:30:50,307 --> 00:30:51,725 ‐Okay? Thanks, Alex. ‐Yep. 682 00:30:56,938 --> 00:30:58,606 We're going for the... 683 00:30:58,607 --> 00:31:00,024 whole enchilada, if you will. 684 00:31:00,025 --> 00:31:02,818 We're gonna try to expose it in its entirety, 685 00:31:02,819 --> 00:31:06,864 and hopefully we'll get an idea of the length, the width, 686 00:31:06,865 --> 00:31:08,949 get a cross section of it and look at it 687 00:31:08,950 --> 00:31:10,993 and see how deep it really is. 688 00:31:10,994 --> 00:31:14,413 I think we all have some hope that it's much bigger, 689 00:31:14,414 --> 00:31:17,875 uh, because then, lends itself to the belief 690 00:31:17,876 --> 00:31:19,086 that it's man‐made. 691 00:31:23,924 --> 00:31:25,674 Hey, Billy! 692 00:31:25,675 --> 00:31:28,511 That's a lot of stones in the side there. 693 00:31:28,512 --> 00:31:30,846 But if we clean this off, maybe it's something. 694 00:31:30,847 --> 00:31:32,389 I would think we're looking for flatness, too. 695 00:31:32,390 --> 00:31:34,016 I‐I'm not sure. 696 00:31:34,017 --> 00:31:36,310 I'll get a little more of that brown stuff off 697 00:31:36,311 --> 00:31:37,728 and then we'll pick 'em all out and see what's there. 698 00:31:37,729 --> 00:31:39,147 Yep. Sounds good. 699 00:31:40,565 --> 00:31:41,857 As Billy Gerhardt 700 00:31:41,858 --> 00:31:44,068 uncovers the rocky surface... 701 00:31:44,069 --> 00:31:46,737 Alex! How you doing? ‐Hey, Terry. 702 00:31:46,738 --> 00:31:50,282 ...geologist Terry Matheson arrives to help identify 703 00:31:50,283 --> 00:31:54,870 if the feature is natural or man‐made. 704 00:31:54,871 --> 00:31:56,580 Unfortunately, the water's come up quite a bit in here, 705 00:31:56,581 --> 00:31:58,499 ‐so you can't see the edges as well. ‐Right. 706 00:31:58,500 --> 00:32:00,793 Approximately what depth did you get the boulders? 707 00:32:00,794 --> 00:32:03,170 Probably about five feet below that, maybe a little bit more, 708 00:32:03,171 --> 00:32:05,923 ‐at the maximum depth. Okay, so 709 00:32:05,924 --> 00:32:07,466 those are probably clastics. They're not limestone... 710 00:32:07,467 --> 00:32:09,093 Mm‐hmm. 711 00:32:09,094 --> 00:32:12,429 ...and they're not the gypsum we find deeper, so... 712 00:32:12,430 --> 00:32:15,891 I'm surprised to see what I think 713 00:32:15,892 --> 00:32:19,687 I would not encounter until about 120 feet down 714 00:32:19,688 --> 00:32:21,272 in the Money Pit area. 715 00:32:21,273 --> 00:32:23,649 Boulders near the surface 716 00:32:23,650 --> 00:32:27,486 that would otherwise be found more than 100 feet underground? 717 00:32:27,487 --> 00:32:31,490 Has Terry Matheson just identified potential evidence 718 00:32:31,491 --> 00:32:34,743 that the stone‐paved area is man‐made? 719 00:32:34,744 --> 00:32:36,579 I'm hoping it'll reveal 720 00:32:36,580 --> 00:32:38,206 a little bit more of the wall to you. 721 00:32:40,584 --> 00:32:42,084 Let's keep digging. 722 00:32:42,085 --> 00:32:43,086 That's what it's all about. 723 00:32:49,551 --> 00:32:52,136 As another new day begins 724 00:32:52,137 --> 00:32:54,013 on Oak Island... 725 00:32:54,014 --> 00:32:57,057 ‐Rick, good to see you. ‐How are you? Good to see you. 726 00:32:57,058 --> 00:32:59,185 ...Rick Lagina joins his nephew Alex, 727 00:32:59,186 --> 00:33:01,353 geoscientist Dr. Ian Spooner, 728 00:33:01,354 --> 00:33:04,982 and heavy equipment operator Billy Gerhardt at the swamp, 729 00:33:04,983 --> 00:33:07,318 where they are continuing their effort 730 00:33:07,319 --> 00:33:10,112 to expose the possible stone walkway. 731 00:33:10,113 --> 00:33:11,864 Having located what they believe to be 732 00:33:11,865 --> 00:33:13,365 the outer edge of the structure, 733 00:33:13,366 --> 00:33:16,243 the team is now carefully washing away 734 00:33:16,244 --> 00:33:18,245 layers of mud and debris 735 00:33:18,246 --> 00:33:21,081 that was deposited during the recent hurricane. 736 00:33:21,082 --> 00:33:22,833 There's a lot of water in there. 737 00:33:22,834 --> 00:33:24,752 What is the area that you want to see 738 00:33:24,753 --> 00:33:27,171 ‐over here in the paved, "paved" area? ‐I just want to get 739 00:33:27,172 --> 00:33:30,424 maybe a ten‐foot‐long by the whole width section. 740 00:33:30,425 --> 00:33:33,928 Get it cleaned, see what it looks like. 741 00:33:33,929 --> 00:33:36,889 The paved area is certainly a well‐defined target. 742 00:33:36,890 --> 00:33:39,683 We want to remove the organics and the sediments 743 00:33:39,684 --> 00:33:42,394 and visually inspect the paved area 744 00:33:42,395 --> 00:33:44,772 to ascertain whether there's anything there 745 00:33:44,773 --> 00:33:47,233 worth investigating. 746 00:33:47,234 --> 00:33:48,901 That looks strange to me. 747 00:33:48,902 --> 00:33:51,320 It looks strange to me, too, so we're in agreement, 748 00:33:51,321 --> 00:33:53,322 there's something strange. 749 00:33:53,323 --> 00:33:56,575 The main thing about it is, you've got all these rocks 750 00:33:56,576 --> 00:33:58,577 that are all fitting together, and my problem is from 751 00:33:58,578 --> 00:34:00,913 a geo point of view, straight geo, 752 00:34:00,914 --> 00:34:02,957 all those rocks, 753 00:34:02,958 --> 00:34:05,000 that's not common. 754 00:34:05,001 --> 00:34:07,461 It's almost as if the rocks were brought in, 755 00:34:07,462 --> 00:34:10,464 and I don't‐don't quite know why. 756 00:34:10,465 --> 00:34:12,841 That is very strange. 757 00:34:12,842 --> 00:34:16,262 That's the paved area right there. 758 00:34:16,263 --> 00:34:18,889 ‐It's fairly flat and fairly consistent. Yeah. 759 00:34:18,890 --> 00:34:23,102 Is this different enough for you to say 760 00:34:23,103 --> 00:34:25,688 this is natural or 761 00:34:25,689 --> 00:34:29,359 the hand of man being introduced here? 762 00:34:32,570 --> 00:34:34,823 It's different enough for me to consider that. 763 00:34:37,117 --> 00:34:40,828 I would like to clean off, like, a ten by 20. 764 00:34:40,829 --> 00:34:44,332 ‐See if it is exactly what we see here. Yep. 765 00:34:48,628 --> 00:34:51,464 The paved area in the swamp is exceedingly interesting. 766 00:34:53,675 --> 00:34:56,635 It truly is an unknown, you know? 767 00:34:56,636 --> 00:34:58,762 When we go looking for a shaft here and there, 768 00:34:58,763 --> 00:35:00,973 we have some background, we have some history. 769 00:35:00,974 --> 00:35:04,351 This thing has materialized out of the ether. 770 00:35:04,352 --> 00:35:05,978 It's quite uniform. 771 00:35:05,979 --> 00:35:08,147 It's level. 772 00:35:08,148 --> 00:35:11,151 My initial thought is, this is indeed man‐made. 773 00:35:14,154 --> 00:35:15,904 Having finally exposed a portion 774 00:35:15,905 --> 00:35:17,072 of the paved stone area... 775 00:35:17,073 --> 00:35:18,198 ‐Hi, chaps. ‐Hey, Gary. 776 00:35:18,199 --> 00:35:20,117 Hi, Gary. 777 00:35:20,118 --> 00:35:22,077 ...Rick has called archaeologist Laird Niven 778 00:35:22,078 --> 00:35:24,288 down to the site to examine i. 779 00:35:24,289 --> 00:35:27,458 So, that is the feature that 780 00:35:27,459 --> 00:35:29,126 we are troubled by, right over there. 781 00:35:29,127 --> 00:35:30,295 Okay. 782 00:35:35,258 --> 00:35:37,176 It doesn't look like any natural formation. 783 00:35:37,177 --> 00:35:38,469 It looks like what to you? 784 00:35:38,470 --> 00:35:40,554 It looks like it‐it they've been introduced. 785 00:35:40,555 --> 00:35:42,139 ‐You do think so? Okay. ‐Yeah. 786 00:35:42,140 --> 00:35:45,684 I can't see any natural way for it to get here. 787 00:35:45,685 --> 00:35:49,230 ‐So you've never seen anything like this before? ‐No. 788 00:35:50,732 --> 00:35:54,193 ‐Billy, would you finish this? Yeah. 789 00:35:54,194 --> 00:35:55,861 I'll get that water moving, 790 00:35:55,862 --> 00:35:58,406 ‐Bill, and then you can remove the rest of this. ‐Yeah. 791 00:36:06,081 --> 00:36:07,915 My mind rounds to 792 00:36:07,916 --> 00:36:09,750 all the work it took 793 00:36:09,751 --> 00:36:13,587 to build this paved area. 794 00:36:13,588 --> 00:36:16,590 I've done a lot of stonework myself 795 00:36:16,591 --> 00:36:19,259 in my younger days, and, uh, 796 00:36:19,260 --> 00:36:21,387 this is an enormous undertaking. 797 00:36:21,388 --> 00:36:24,807 Building it was probably a lot more difficult 798 00:36:24,808 --> 00:36:27,017 than it is uncovering this, 799 00:36:27,018 --> 00:36:29,228 but we have to uncover it because we need to know 800 00:36:29,229 --> 00:36:31,105 what, when, where, why and ho. 801 00:36:31,106 --> 00:36:34,692 And the hope is that we will be able to investigate it. 802 00:36:34,693 --> 00:36:39,279 So here's the thing, I don't know to make of it. 803 00:36:39,280 --> 00:36:43,867 I mean, I think we all, to varying degrees of belief, 804 00:36:43,868 --> 00:36:45,369 that this is 805 00:36:45,370 --> 00:36:47,705 something out of the ordinary. 806 00:36:47,706 --> 00:36:50,416 But I do know this, it's just made the swamp 807 00:36:50,417 --> 00:36:52,876 ‐that much more interesting. Absolutely. 808 00:36:52,877 --> 00:36:55,212 ‐Yeah. ‐ So to that end, I think 809 00:36:55,213 --> 00:36:56,839 tomorrow morning we'll have another go at it 810 00:36:56,840 --> 00:36:59,007 ‐and see what it looks like. ‐Yeah. 811 00:36:59,008 --> 00:37:00,760 There's something strange here. 812 00:37:07,392 --> 00:37:09,435 That's a puzzle. 813 00:37:09,436 --> 00:37:11,311 One day after successfully exposing 814 00:37:11,312 --> 00:37:14,690 part of the paved stone feature at the swamp, Rick Lagina 815 00:37:14,691 --> 00:37:17,234 and geoscientist Dr. Ian Spooner 816 00:37:17,235 --> 00:37:19,611 return to the site to see what else 817 00:37:19,612 --> 00:37:21,405 may have been revealed 818 00:37:21,406 --> 00:37:24,116 now that even more water has been removed. 819 00:37:24,117 --> 00:37:26,285 My issue is, 820 00:37:26,286 --> 00:37:29,788 if this was just dumped by glaciers or something like that, 821 00:37:29,789 --> 00:37:33,125 it would be piles. It would be a little less horizontal. 822 00:37:33,126 --> 00:37:37,254 You'd see these undulate a bit, but it's straight across. 823 00:37:37,255 --> 00:37:40,257 You have to have somebody to do it. 824 00:37:40,258 --> 00:37:43,886 In my mind, somebody created a surface. 825 00:37:43,887 --> 00:37:45,679 You know, I‐I truly want to send my brother 826 00:37:45,680 --> 00:37:47,347 some photographs of this. 827 00:37:47,348 --> 00:37:50,809 And then I'm I'll give him a call. 828 00:37:50,810 --> 00:37:52,895 I'm sure he's gonna ask your opinion, I'm certain of that. 829 00:37:54,898 --> 00:37:58,567 We have this significant mystery ongoing in the swamp 830 00:37:58,568 --> 00:38:00,569 because the paved area has proven to be 831 00:38:00,570 --> 00:38:01,905 quite a puzzle within a puzzle. 832 00:38:03,198 --> 00:38:06,033 Hey. Morning. 833 00:38:06,034 --> 00:38:07,785 I have, uh, Dr. Spooner here, 834 00:38:07,786 --> 00:38:10,788 and we're looking at the so‐called paved area. 835 00:38:10,789 --> 00:38:13,792 I sent you some photographs, which I think you have. 836 00:38:15,752 --> 00:38:18,587 I'll be honest, my eyes and boots perspective, 837 00:38:18,588 --> 00:38:19,672 it's man‐made. 838 00:38:21,841 --> 00:38:25,093 Uh, there's these layers of stone 839 00:38:25,094 --> 00:38:28,472 above the till that have no clay around them, 840 00:38:28,473 --> 00:38:31,016 and yet have swamp sediment around them. 841 00:38:31,017 --> 00:38:33,185 It has to be manipulated. 842 00:38:33,186 --> 00:38:36,396 I can't find a natural process that would have led to this. 843 00:38:36,397 --> 00:38:37,773 It's a manipulated site. 844 00:38:37,774 --> 00:38:40,067 I've worked in these environments 845 00:38:40,068 --> 00:38:43,403 and in a similar environment, but it's nothing like this. 846 00:38:43,404 --> 00:38:45,072 To me, it's like 847 00:38:45,073 --> 00:38:47,991 somebody came in and put the small rocks on the bottom, 848 00:38:47,992 --> 00:38:50,619 just like building a road, and then 849 00:38:50,620 --> 00:38:52,496 put the bigger rocks on top of that. 850 00:38:52,497 --> 00:38:55,792 It's that, I think, precise. 851 00:39:02,006 --> 00:39:06,219 He said he has no explanation other than it's man‐made. 852 00:39:13,268 --> 00:39:14,935 ‐I don't know. ‐Well, 853 00:39:14,936 --> 00:39:18,689 if you go seaward, we're on a line, 854 00:39:18,690 --> 00:39:22,776 like, if you have the eye as a excavated site. 855 00:39:22,777 --> 00:39:26,780 If you have this paved area as a filled‐in site, 856 00:39:26,781 --> 00:39:29,616 maybe trying to make a platform, something solid, 857 00:39:29,617 --> 00:39:31,702 and then if you go seaward, 858 00:39:31,703 --> 00:39:33,662 you have the deepest portion of the swamp, 859 00:39:33,663 --> 00:39:36,498 where it was actually an inle. 860 00:39:36,499 --> 00:39:38,834 It all lines up 861 00:39:38,835 --> 00:39:40,711 with the peninsula cutting through it. 862 00:39:40,712 --> 00:39:44,131 And, so, was this some kind of work surface if people 863 00:39:44,132 --> 00:39:45,341 brought boats in? 864 00:39:46,801 --> 00:39:48,844 A work surface, like a dock? 865 00:39:48,845 --> 00:39:52,598 Possibly used for boats or ships? 866 00:39:52,599 --> 00:39:55,934 And located in the middle of the Oak Island swamp? 867 00:39:55,935 --> 00:39:59,271 Could the team have finally unearthed definitive proof 868 00:39:59,272 --> 00:40:02,774 that the swamp was artificially created centuries ago, 869 00:40:02,775 --> 00:40:06,278 and that a ship or sailing vessel was offloaded here 870 00:40:06,279 --> 00:40:11,199 and then sunk in such a way as to hide all evidence? 871 00:40:11,200 --> 00:40:13,952 It's as wide as a two‐lane road, 872 00:40:13,953 --> 00:40:15,246 no question about that. 873 00:40:21,628 --> 00:40:25,672 This is not what I expected to see 874 00:40:25,673 --> 00:40:28,967 in how clear the interface is and how 875 00:40:28,968 --> 00:40:31,970 orderly the stones look, as if they're placed. 876 00:40:31,971 --> 00:40:35,891 I've always thought the swamp held some sort of information, 877 00:40:35,892 --> 00:40:38,352 uh, maybe not everything, but something. 878 00:40:38,353 --> 00:40:40,647 I mean, it's just very strange. It shouldn't be there. 879 00:40:46,235 --> 00:40:47,654 Oh, yeah, we can. Yeah. 880 00:40:50,573 --> 00:40:52,700 ‐Bye. ‐Take care. Bye. 881 00:40:54,285 --> 00:40:56,912 For Rick, Marty, and their team, 882 00:40:56,913 --> 00:41:00,123 unearthing what appears to be a man‐made stone platform, 883 00:41:00,124 --> 00:41:02,626 or wharf, in the middle of the swamp 884 00:41:02,627 --> 00:41:06,338 is nothing short of a historic breakthrough discovery. 885 00:41:06,339 --> 00:41:08,924 One that may prove to be just as critical 886 00:41:08,925 --> 00:41:10,926 to solving the Oak Island mystery 887 00:41:10,927 --> 00:41:13,720 as finding the original Money Pit. 888 00:41:13,721 --> 00:41:15,555 But who built it? When? 889 00:41:15,556 --> 00:41:18,809 And for what purpose? 890 00:41:18,810 --> 00:41:21,061 Those are the questions that, when answered, 891 00:41:21,062 --> 00:41:22,688 might very well provide 892 00:41:22,689 --> 00:41:26,191 the keys to solving the entire Oak Island mystery, 893 00:41:26,192 --> 00:41:29,736 and could, in turn, change the history 894 00:41:29,737 --> 00:41:32,030 not only of North America 895 00:41:32,031 --> 00:41:35,283 but of the world. 896 00:41:35,284 --> 00:41:38,412 Next time on The Curse of Oak Island... 897 00:41:38,413 --> 00:41:41,748 The 90 Foot Stone is the most important artifact. 898 00:41:41,749 --> 00:41:43,583 ‐ Rick, look at this one. ‐ I think we found it. 899 00:41:43,584 --> 00:41:46,128 Yeah. Whoa! 900 00:41:46,129 --> 00:41:49,172 The eye of the swamp is connected to the paved area. 901 00:41:49,173 --> 00:41:51,091 Ooh! Look at that! 902 00:41:51,092 --> 00:41:53,760 That is a really old tunneling tool. 903 00:41:53,761 --> 00:41:55,137 That's awesome! 904 00:41:55,138 --> 00:41:58,557 ‐Oh. Holy crow. ‐What the heck is it? 905 00:41:58,558 --> 00:42:00,851 ‐This is old. ‐ We found the smoking gun. 906 00:42:00,852 --> 00:42:02,602 ‐The paved area is man‐made. All right! 907 00:42:02,603 --> 00:42:05,464 Subtitled by Diego Moraes / Ewerton Henrique www.oakisland.tk 70111

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