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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:01,502 --> 00:00:03,462 Tonight on The Curse of Oak Island... 2 00:00:03,462 --> 00:00:04,963 So you're gonna put "X" on the ground now, are you? 3 00:00:04,963 --> 00:00:07,466 There is this major anomaly, right in the core 4 00:00:07,466 --> 00:00:08,842 ‐of the Money Pit. ‐That's incredible. 5 00:00:08,842 --> 00:00:10,511 There it goes! 6 00:00:10,511 --> 00:00:12,471 You're digging on Oak Island. ‐Wow. 7 00:00:12,471 --> 00:00:14,181 Ooh, that's fantastic! 8 00:00:14,181 --> 00:00:15,849 This is an old digging tool! 9 00:00:15,849 --> 00:00:17,351 Wow! 10 00:00:17,351 --> 00:00:19,394 Look at all the wood. 11 00:00:19,394 --> 00:00:21,355 Well, that is spectacular! That looks carved 12 00:00:21,355 --> 00:00:23,023 ‐in there, doesn't it? ‐Roman numerals. 13 00:00:23,023 --> 00:00:24,775 - Absolutely. - This is like nothing 14 00:00:24,775 --> 00:00:26,860 - ‐we've seen before. - That's old. 15 00:00:26,860 --> 00:00:28,779 This could be original wood. 16 00:00:31,114 --> 00:00:34,743 There is an island in the North Atlantic 17 00:00:34,743 --> 00:00:38,247 where people have been looking for an incredible treasure 18 00:00:38,247 --> 00:00:41,542 for more than 200 years. 19 00:00:41,542 --> 00:00:44,670 So far, they have found a stone slab 20 00:00:44,670 --> 00:00:47,339 with strange symbols carved into it, 21 00:00:47,339 --> 00:00:50,175 mysterious fragments of human bone, 22 00:00:50,175 --> 00:00:53,887 and a lead cross whose origin may stretch back 23 00:00:53,887 --> 00:00:56,515 to the days of the Knights Templar. 24 00:00:56,515 --> 00:01:00,936 To date, six men have died trying to solve the mystery. 25 00:01:02,020 --> 00:01:04,106 And, according to legend, 26 00:01:04,106 --> 00:01:07,234 one more will have to die 27 00:01:07,234 --> 00:01:10,862 before the treasure can be found. 28 00:01:19,913 --> 00:01:22,082 All right, here it comes. 29 00:01:22,082 --> 00:01:24,251 Bring it up a little! 30 00:01:24,251 --> 00:01:26,587 Looks good. 31 00:01:26,587 --> 00:01:28,714 We're gonna fill this one all the way up. 32 00:01:28,714 --> 00:01:31,758 With only a few precious weeks remaining 33 00:01:31,758 --> 00:01:35,721 before the onset of another harsh North Atlantic winter, 34 00:01:35,721 --> 00:01:37,723 brothers Rick and Marty Lagina 35 00:01:37,723 --> 00:01:40,017 are determined to locate the original Money Pit, 36 00:01:40,017 --> 00:01:43,562 and the fabled treasure vault reported to be hidden there, 37 00:01:43,562 --> 00:01:47,566 before being forced to suspend all operations on Oak Island 38 00:01:47,566 --> 00:01:49,609 for the rest of the year. 39 00:01:49,609 --> 00:01:51,486 That's good. 40 00:01:51,486 --> 00:01:53,280 After a morning spent filling in 41 00:01:53,280 --> 00:01:55,949 the massive 8‐A borehole... 42 00:01:55,949 --> 00:01:58,952 Welcome, Jeremy. 43 00:01:58,952 --> 00:02:00,954 ...Rick, Marty, 44 00:02:00,954 --> 00:02:03,123 their partner Craig Tester, and members of their team 45 00:02:03,123 --> 00:02:05,292 have arranged to meet 46 00:02:05,292 --> 00:02:08,795 with geophysicist Jeremy Church of Eagle Canada. 47 00:02:08,795 --> 00:02:11,465 Jeremy has prepared a report 48 00:02:11,465 --> 00:02:13,634 on the seismic scanning data that was conducted 49 00:02:13,634 --> 00:02:18,263 earlier this year across the eastern end of the island. 50 00:02:18,263 --> 00:02:21,975 Um, I, for one, love this portion of this quest. 51 00:02:21,975 --> 00:02:23,769 You know, I love getting the data back, 52 00:02:23,769 --> 00:02:25,312 and I think everybody else is keen 53 00:02:25,312 --> 00:02:26,855 to see what you've got. 54 00:02:26,855 --> 00:02:28,732 It's a pleasure being here, guys. Thank you. 55 00:02:28,732 --> 00:02:30,484 So you're gonna put "X" on the ground now, are you? 56 00:02:30,484 --> 00:02:32,194 I'm gonna try my best. 57 00:02:34,196 --> 00:02:35,322 Cool. 58 00:02:35,322 --> 00:02:38,325 Using 18,000 dynamite charges, 59 00:02:38,325 --> 00:02:41,036 which were set off across Oak Island's eastern half, 60 00:02:41,036 --> 00:02:43,914 a virtual underground map was created 61 00:02:43,914 --> 00:02:47,000 down to depths of as much as 300 feet, 62 00:02:47,000 --> 00:02:48,835 indicating possible objects, 63 00:02:48,835 --> 00:02:51,588 voids or structures buried below. 64 00:02:51,588 --> 00:02:55,342 Using this new data, as well as previous seismic surveys 65 00:02:55,342 --> 00:02:58,303 conducted in the swamp and Money Pit areas last year, 66 00:02:58,303 --> 00:03:01,431 the team from Eagle Canada has generated a master map 67 00:03:01,431 --> 00:03:03,517 of any notable anomalies 68 00:03:03,517 --> 00:03:07,187 for the team to consider investigating further. 69 00:03:07,187 --> 00:03:09,690 Okay, well, I guess we'll dive in. 70 00:03:09,690 --> 00:03:11,566 We're ready. 71 00:03:11,566 --> 00:03:14,111 Um, here's an overview. 72 00:03:14,111 --> 00:03:17,656 So, this is just showing us what's been shot to date, 73 00:03:17,656 --> 00:03:18,865 plus the new stuff. 74 00:03:18,865 --> 00:03:21,201 So, there's 80,000 sample points 75 00:03:21,201 --> 00:03:22,703 on the east drumlin 3D, 76 00:03:22,703 --> 00:03:24,413 so that's a lot of data. 77 00:03:24,413 --> 00:03:26,206 Let's get into the exciting stuff. 78 00:03:26,206 --> 00:03:28,417 Yeah! ‐This is 79 00:03:28,417 --> 00:03:30,210 the Money Pit data set. 80 00:03:30,210 --> 00:03:33,171 So, each one of these, these are all little... disturbances, 81 00:03:33,171 --> 00:03:35,549 probably searcher tunnels. 82 00:03:35,549 --> 00:03:39,386 But within there, there is a subtle little anomaly. 83 00:03:40,846 --> 00:03:44,641 So, now we're down 160 feet below surface. 84 00:03:44,641 --> 00:03:46,726 We're right in the core of the Money Pit. 85 00:03:46,726 --> 00:03:48,728 So, this is what I call the "teardrop." 86 00:03:48,728 --> 00:03:51,064 It's sitting right on top of the Money Pit. 87 00:03:51,064 --> 00:03:53,400 What's the size? 88 00:03:53,400 --> 00:03:55,235 13 feet by 13 feet. 89 00:03:55,235 --> 00:03:57,070 An anomaly? 90 00:03:57,070 --> 00:04:00,949 Matching the 13‐foot diameter of the original Money Pit, 91 00:04:00,949 --> 00:04:04,161 as reported by Daniel McGinnis and his two friends 92 00:04:04,161 --> 00:04:07,664 when they discovered it in 1795? 93 00:04:07,664 --> 00:04:09,708 Could the team have finally pinpointed 94 00:04:09,708 --> 00:04:12,586 the original treasure shaft? 95 00:04:12,586 --> 00:04:14,254 And where is it? 96 00:04:14,254 --> 00:04:16,256 Is there not a well through it? 97 00:04:16,256 --> 00:04:17,716 I'll turn it so you can see. 98 00:04:17,716 --> 00:04:20,177 And I've got them at the proper depths. 99 00:04:20,177 --> 00:04:24,765 So, the teardrop sits just below the Chappell shoe. 100 00:04:24,765 --> 00:04:28,560 So H8 catches the south end of it. 101 00:04:28,560 --> 00:04:30,937 - ‐Just missed it. - Just. 102 00:04:32,063 --> 00:04:34,649 This much, Marty. 103 00:04:36,777 --> 00:04:41,239 Two years ago, Rick, Marty, Craig and the team 104 00:04:41,239 --> 00:04:45,118 sunk a 60‐inch‐wide shaft known as H8 in the Money Pit area 105 00:04:45,118 --> 00:04:48,622 and were stunned when, at a depth of 170 feet, 106 00:04:48,622 --> 00:04:51,625 they hit an obstruction that they believed may have been 107 00:04:51,625 --> 00:04:54,294 the legendary Chappell Vault. 108 00:04:54,294 --> 00:04:57,756 It feels like I'm on a whole bunch of wood at once now. 109 00:04:57,756 --> 00:05:01,426 Unfortunately, as they attempted to dig deeper, 110 00:05:01,426 --> 00:05:03,595 the object they hit was pushed further down 111 00:05:03,595 --> 00:05:05,806 and somewhere off to the side 112 00:05:05,806 --> 00:05:08,600 into a possible void or chamber. 113 00:05:08,600 --> 00:05:13,271 Could this seismic anomaly, located right next to H8, 114 00:05:13,271 --> 00:05:17,067 be where the Chappell Vault is now located? 115 00:05:17,067 --> 00:05:20,612 For me, this is incredible information. 116 00:05:20,612 --> 00:05:22,280 I mean, there's nothing says 117 00:05:22,280 --> 00:05:23,990 we couldn't drop a can in that area. 118 00:05:23,990 --> 00:05:25,659 ‐‐ ‐The three of us 119 00:05:25,659 --> 00:05:28,662 always thought that surely technology 120 00:05:28,662 --> 00:05:31,665 will break this acorn wide open. 121 00:05:31,665 --> 00:05:33,917 And now maybe, just maybe, it will crack. 122 00:05:33,917 --> 00:05:35,502 Yeah. 123 00:05:35,502 --> 00:05:38,171 I am highly encouraged by the anomaly 124 00:05:38,171 --> 00:05:40,382 that Jeremy pointed out near H8, 125 00:05:40,382 --> 00:05:43,009 because it's deep enough that we could have missed it. 126 00:05:43,009 --> 00:05:45,053 I mean, I was... I was rapidly getting to the point 127 00:05:45,053 --> 00:05:47,055 where I thought there's some great treasure there, 128 00:05:47,055 --> 00:05:49,015 we couldn't possibly have missed it‐‐ 129 00:05:49,015 --> 00:05:50,642 unless it's way deep. 130 00:05:50,642 --> 00:05:54,354 Jeremy, fantastic presentation. Much appreciated. 131 00:05:54,354 --> 00:05:57,190 It gives us lots of things to look at, really, 132 00:05:57,190 --> 00:05:58,692 but one in particular‐‐ the one you've delineated. 133 00:05:58,692 --> 00:06:00,527 And speaking of that, 134 00:06:00,527 --> 00:06:01,695 let's get after it! 135 00:06:01,695 --> 00:06:04,072 Thank you. 136 00:06:04,072 --> 00:06:07,409 Later that day... 137 00:06:07,409 --> 00:06:09,995 Put it over the center. We'll set her down. 138 00:06:09,995 --> 00:06:12,539 Come up a little bit. 139 00:06:12,539 --> 00:06:13,707 We need to turn it. 140 00:06:13,707 --> 00:06:15,000 Pull it. Pull it, Scott. 141 00:06:15,000 --> 00:06:17,544 ...as the teams from Irving Equipment Limited 142 00:06:17,544 --> 00:06:20,005 and ROC Equipment work to reposition 143 00:06:20,005 --> 00:06:21,882 the 60‐ton oscillator over the new dig site 144 00:06:21,882 --> 00:06:23,675 at the Money Pit... 145 00:06:23,675 --> 00:06:26,011 Yeah, that's perfect. 146 00:06:26,011 --> 00:06:28,722 ...Rick and members of the Oak Island team 147 00:06:28,722 --> 00:06:30,599 head to the swamp, 148 00:06:30,599 --> 00:06:33,602 where they've arranged to have botanist Dr. Rodger Evans 149 00:06:33,602 --> 00:06:35,854 give his analysis of a recent discovery 150 00:06:35,854 --> 00:06:39,149 near the area dubbed the "Eye of the Swamp." 151 00:06:41,526 --> 00:06:43,236 This is our big question mark. 152 00:06:43,236 --> 00:06:44,571 This is the stump. 153 00:06:44,571 --> 00:06:46,990 Holy snaps. 154 00:06:46,990 --> 00:06:49,367 That's crazy. 155 00:06:49,367 --> 00:06:51,828 Five weeks ago, 156 00:06:51,828 --> 00:06:55,081 while excavating a mysterious circle of large boulders... 157 00:06:55,081 --> 00:06:56,791 That's a big stump. 158 00:06:56,791 --> 00:06:59,252 ...Rick, Marty and the team were stunned 159 00:06:59,252 --> 00:07:03,423 to uncover a large stump embedded in the muck and mud. 160 00:07:03,423 --> 00:07:06,384 Because trees cannot generally grow 161 00:07:06,384 --> 00:07:08,678 in bodies of water, the team is curious to know 162 00:07:08,678 --> 00:07:11,723 if their discovery offers additional evidence 163 00:07:11,723 --> 00:07:14,267 that the swamp was man‐made. 164 00:07:14,267 --> 00:07:15,769 The trees indicate 165 00:07:15,769 --> 00:07:18,271 that at one point it was dry land, so... 166 00:07:18,271 --> 00:07:21,608 why are the stumps, um, spread across the width 167 00:07:21,608 --> 00:07:23,735 and breadth of the swamp? 168 00:07:23,735 --> 00:07:25,779 So with Dr. Rodger Evans, 169 00:07:25,779 --> 00:07:26,946 we may get some answers. 170 00:07:26,946 --> 00:07:29,115 What I'd like to do 171 00:07:29,115 --> 00:07:30,784 is take some of this with me. 172 00:07:30,784 --> 00:07:32,160 ‐‐ ‐So, what I can do is, 173 00:07:32,160 --> 00:07:34,954 I'll take that back to the lab and clean it up, and I'll 174 00:07:34,954 --> 00:07:36,915 have a look at this tissue and see... 175 00:07:36,915 --> 00:07:38,958 ‐under the microscope. ‐Okay. 176 00:07:38,958 --> 00:07:40,752 I bet you'd like to pull that off 177 00:07:40,752 --> 00:07:42,545 and see what's underneath that, wouldn't you? 178 00:07:44,631 --> 00:07:47,759 The way that came off... 179 00:07:47,759 --> 00:07:50,011 you shouldn't be able to pull a tree apart like that. 180 00:07:50,011 --> 00:07:52,597 It almost looks like... cork oak? 181 00:07:54,015 --> 00:07:55,600 Is that cork oak? 182 00:07:55,600 --> 00:07:58,103 ‐I have no idea. ‐It's really light. 183 00:07:58,103 --> 00:08:01,439 Yeah. The outer bark of a tree 184 00:08:01,439 --> 00:08:03,608 is called the cork, the corky layer. 185 00:08:03,608 --> 00:08:06,277 It just so happens that cork oaks have a cork layer 186 00:08:06,277 --> 00:08:08,488 that you can harvest without damaging the tree, 187 00:08:08,488 --> 00:08:10,490 and that's where corks come from. 188 00:08:10,490 --> 00:08:12,659 If it was covered in... in cork, 189 00:08:12,659 --> 00:08:15,787 cork oaks only grow in Portugal. 190 00:08:15,787 --> 00:08:18,832 A possible cork oak? 191 00:08:18,832 --> 00:08:21,000 Native to Portugal, 192 00:08:21,000 --> 00:08:23,294 cork oak is known for its buoyancy 193 00:08:23,294 --> 00:08:25,964 and is commonly used for bottling wines. 194 00:08:25,964 --> 00:08:28,216 Because it is a natural fire retardant, 195 00:08:28,216 --> 00:08:31,010 it is also used in construction. 196 00:08:31,010 --> 00:08:34,180 But if this stump is actually from a Portuguese tree, 197 00:08:34,180 --> 00:08:37,517 how did it come to be on Oak Island? 198 00:08:37,517 --> 00:08:40,520 It is well known that Portuguese explorers, 199 00:08:40,520 --> 00:08:43,815 as well as Portuguese pirates, frequently visited 200 00:08:43,815 --> 00:08:45,275 what is now known as Nova Scotia 201 00:08:45,275 --> 00:08:49,988 from the early 16th to the late 18th centuries. 202 00:08:49,988 --> 00:08:53,408 However, some researchers believe 203 00:08:53,408 --> 00:08:55,869 that members from a Portuguese sect of the Knights Templar, 204 00:08:55,869 --> 00:08:57,495 known as the Knights of Christ, 205 00:08:57,495 --> 00:09:01,416 may have visited the region even earlier. 206 00:09:01,416 --> 00:09:04,044 We are always looking for cultural influences, 207 00:09:04,044 --> 00:09:06,713 and to me, that would be a big thing. 208 00:09:06,713 --> 00:09:09,549 You have a nonindigenous species brought here by some culture 209 00:09:09,549 --> 00:09:12,010 or group of people, 210 00:09:12,010 --> 00:09:15,013 - ‐possibly to mark the island. - Yeah, 211 00:09:15,013 --> 00:09:16,848 I'm‐I'm with you‐‐ that's what I've always thought it was, 212 00:09:16,848 --> 00:09:19,934 like with the canopy oaks and... it was... it was a marker. 213 00:09:19,934 --> 00:09:23,897 It was a way to identify this as the place you wanted to be. 214 00:09:23,897 --> 00:09:26,024 ‐That's a big clue. ‐Yeah. 215 00:09:26,024 --> 00:09:28,735 Although red oak trees are common 216 00:09:28,735 --> 00:09:31,905 on Oak Island and throughout Nova Scotia, 217 00:09:31,905 --> 00:09:34,783 numerous treasure hunters and local landowners 218 00:09:34,783 --> 00:09:39,579 have long identified a species they call the "canopy oaks." 219 00:09:39,579 --> 00:09:42,916 According to one theory, they were planted centuries ago 220 00:09:42,916 --> 00:09:44,918 by the original treasure depositors 221 00:09:44,918 --> 00:09:47,587 to serve as a marker or beacon. 222 00:09:47,587 --> 00:09:50,381 Unfortunately, over the past century, 223 00:09:50,381 --> 00:09:54,385 these particular trees have completely died off. 224 00:09:54,385 --> 00:09:57,597 Let me do some investigating on cork oaks. 225 00:09:57,597 --> 00:09:58,932 That'd be really interesting, 226 00:09:58,932 --> 00:10:00,850 if that's what it turns out to be. 227 00:10:00,850 --> 00:10:02,894 Well, if you can shed any light on this, 228 00:10:02,894 --> 00:10:04,395 we would truly appreciate it. 229 00:10:04,395 --> 00:10:05,855 - ‐Thank you. - All right. 230 00:10:05,855 --> 00:10:07,023 Yeah, this is pretty neat. 231 00:10:13,488 --> 00:10:16,074 As a new day of investigation begins 232 00:10:16,074 --> 00:10:18,660 on Oak Island, 233 00:10:18,660 --> 00:10:20,954 brothers Rick and Marty Lagina 234 00:10:20,954 --> 00:10:22,997 are welcoming back two special guests 235 00:10:22,997 --> 00:10:24,958 ‐to the island... ‐Okay. 236 00:10:24,958 --> 00:10:26,417 Well, here we are. 237 00:10:26,417 --> 00:10:27,961 If I take the box for you, 238 00:10:27,961 --> 00:10:30,213 ‐would that be a little easier? ‐Thank you. Great. Thank you. 239 00:10:30,213 --> 00:10:33,800 ...Lee Lamb and her brother, Richard Restall, whose family 240 00:10:33,800 --> 00:10:36,719 led by their father, Robert Restall Sr., 241 00:10:36,719 --> 00:10:38,888 forged an unforgettable chapter 242 00:10:38,888 --> 00:10:43,143 in the 225‐year Oak Island mystery. 243 00:10:44,602 --> 00:10:46,479 There they are! ‐Well... 244 00:10:46,479 --> 00:10:48,731 - ‐Lee. How are you? - Hello. 245 00:10:48,731 --> 00:10:50,692 ‐ I will get a hug. ‐Rick! 246 00:10:50,692 --> 00:10:54,195 When I think of Lee Lamb and Ricky Restall, 247 00:10:54,195 --> 00:10:56,990 it's hard not to be emotionally connected. 248 00:10:56,990 --> 00:10:59,993 My hope continues to be that as 249 00:10:59,993 --> 00:11:04,080 this mystery evolves under our stewardship, 250 00:11:04,080 --> 00:11:07,333 the Restalls continue helping us with moving 251 00:11:07,333 --> 00:11:08,793 the search agenda forward. 252 00:11:08,793 --> 00:11:11,588 So, welcome! Welcome back to Oak Island. 253 00:11:11,588 --> 00:11:13,673 Thank you. It's good to be back. 254 00:11:13,673 --> 00:11:16,217 You two are sort of like a walking history of the place, 255 00:11:16,217 --> 00:11:17,594 really, in a very real sense. 256 00:11:17,594 --> 00:11:19,762 ‐Yeah. Yeah. ‐I'm gonna assume, Lee, 257 00:11:19,762 --> 00:11:21,347 that just returning here 258 00:11:21,347 --> 00:11:23,391 is always got to be somewhat bittersweet, right? 259 00:11:23,391 --> 00:11:25,727 ‐‐ ‐I know, or I'm pretty sure, 260 00:11:25,727 --> 00:11:27,770 you're interested still in the search, right? 261 00:11:27,770 --> 00:11:30,106 ‐Of course, very much so. ‐Yeah. 262 00:11:30,106 --> 00:11:33,109 Lee, Ricky, I speak for everyone here, you know, 263 00:11:33,109 --> 00:11:36,070 you're such a part of the history, the mystery, 264 00:11:36,070 --> 00:11:41,534 that is Oak Island and, you are part of it. 265 00:11:41,534 --> 00:11:43,036 An integral part of it. 266 00:11:44,329 --> 00:11:46,539 In 1959, 267 00:11:46,539 --> 00:11:49,584 former motorcycle daredevils Robert Restall Sr. 268 00:11:49,584 --> 00:11:52,962 and his wife Mildred moved with their two sons 269 00:11:52,962 --> 00:11:55,965 Bobby Jr. and Richard to Oak Island. 270 00:11:55,965 --> 00:11:58,384 For six years, they braved desolate 271 00:11:58,384 --> 00:12:01,596 and often harsh living conditions on the island 272 00:12:01,596 --> 00:12:05,308 while conducting extensive investigations in the swamp, 273 00:12:05,308 --> 00:12:08,978 at Smith's Cove and the Money Pit. 274 00:12:08,978 --> 00:12:13,441 I feel that the treasure is here, and that we can get it. 275 00:12:13,441 --> 00:12:16,402 And we're going to stay here until we do. 276 00:12:16,402 --> 00:12:19,155 After six exhaustive years, 277 00:12:19,155 --> 00:12:21,950 in the summer of 1965, 278 00:12:21,950 --> 00:12:25,078 Robert believed he was on the verge of solving the mystery, 279 00:12:25,078 --> 00:12:27,872 and that the sacrifices made by his family 280 00:12:27,872 --> 00:12:29,540 were about to pay off. 281 00:12:29,540 --> 00:12:33,086 But on August 17th, while investigating 282 00:12:33,086 --> 00:12:36,589 a 27‐foot deep shaft at Smith's Cove 283 00:12:36,589 --> 00:12:40,426 that he and his son Bobby Jr. had constructed in an attempt 284 00:12:40,426 --> 00:12:43,596 to locate and block off the main flood tunnel, 285 00:12:43,596 --> 00:12:47,934 Robert, Bobby Jr. and two other men 286 00:12:47,934 --> 00:12:50,979 lost their lives due to mysterious poison gasses 287 00:12:50,979 --> 00:12:53,606 that emitted out of the bottom. 288 00:12:57,151 --> 00:13:00,446 Although the tragedy forever altered the lives 289 00:13:00,446 --> 00:13:03,950 of Lee, Richard and their late mother Mildred... 290 00:13:03,950 --> 00:13:06,286 These are Bobby's journals. 291 00:13:06,286 --> 00:13:08,538 ...in recent years, 292 00:13:08,538 --> 00:13:10,456 they have visited the island, 293 00:13:10,456 --> 00:13:13,710 in the hopes of helping Rick, Marty and the team 294 00:13:13,710 --> 00:13:17,130 achieve their father's shared dream. 295 00:13:18,798 --> 00:13:22,051 The Restall family is part of our family now, 296 00:13:22,051 --> 00:13:25,013 and‐and that was really the impetus for reaching out to you, 297 00:13:25,013 --> 00:13:27,849 because what do families do, right? 298 00:13:27,849 --> 00:13:29,892 ‐They get together. ‐Yeah. ‐‐ 299 00:13:29,892 --> 00:13:31,853 So anyway, we would like to talk to you a little bit 300 00:13:31,853 --> 00:13:33,896 - ‐about what's going on. Um... - ‐ 301 00:13:33,896 --> 00:13:36,065 And the reason these items are in front of you is because 302 00:13:36,065 --> 00:13:37,734 all of these things 303 00:13:37,734 --> 00:13:39,902 speak to something happening prior to 1795. 304 00:13:39,902 --> 00:13:42,363 Look at these. 305 00:13:42,363 --> 00:13:44,991 - ‐Now, I love me bobby‐dazzlers... - ‐ 306 00:13:44,991 --> 00:13:48,036 ...because not only are they spectacular, 307 00:13:48,036 --> 00:13:50,038 but these are personal items. 308 00:13:50,038 --> 00:13:51,330 ‐‐ ‐To me, 309 00:13:51,330 --> 00:13:55,251 the find of the century... 310 00:13:56,419 --> 00:13:59,088 My favorite find is this. 311 00:13:59,088 --> 00:14:01,174 - ‐This is jewelry. - ‐ 312 00:14:01,174 --> 00:14:03,551 It's a lead cross. 313 00:14:03,551 --> 00:14:05,803 And this would've been worn by someone 314 00:14:05,803 --> 00:14:09,766 a very long time ago and lost on Oak Island. 315 00:14:09,766 --> 00:14:11,517 - ‐‐ - Yeah. So, it's‐it's, 316 00:14:11,517 --> 00:14:15,438 kind of a plain design, though. That would mean it's older. 317 00:14:15,438 --> 00:14:18,316 Um, yeah, that's what makes it special, 318 00:14:18,316 --> 00:14:21,152 - ‐that nice, crude design. - ‐ 319 00:14:21,152 --> 00:14:23,988 And we actually got the lead tested, 320 00:14:23,988 --> 00:14:28,201 and the source of the lead came from France. 321 00:14:29,535 --> 00:14:32,371 And that mine closed in 1300, 322 00:14:32,371 --> 00:14:35,333 which is a heck of a long time ago. 323 00:14:35,333 --> 00:14:37,251 Okay. 324 00:14:37,251 --> 00:14:38,544 The dates are incredible. 325 00:14:38,544 --> 00:14:40,922 They‐they really are. I mean, this is... 326 00:14:40,922 --> 00:14:43,049 All of these finds. 327 00:14:43,049 --> 00:14:44,884 We're taking the story of Oak Island 328 00:14:44,884 --> 00:14:47,887 way, way back into centuries 329 00:14:47,887 --> 00:14:51,474 we could only have dreamed about before. 330 00:14:51,474 --> 00:14:53,684 ‐ And now I'll pass it over to Rick, 331 00:14:53,684 --> 00:14:56,854 'cause he's got some interesting wood news. 332 00:14:56,854 --> 00:14:58,731 Well, I called Lee and... 333 00:14:58,731 --> 00:15:01,400 and asked about the canopy oak. 334 00:15:01,400 --> 00:15:05,655 And, she has kindly brought a leaf and an acorn 335 00:15:05,655 --> 00:15:08,491 representative of the old umbrella oaks, 336 00:15:08,491 --> 00:15:09,492 canopy oaks. 337 00:15:09,492 --> 00:15:12,787 Well, they were digging on the beach 338 00:15:12,787 --> 00:15:13,955 when they first arrived. 339 00:15:13,955 --> 00:15:15,164 ‐ 340 00:15:15,164 --> 00:15:17,083 And they dug a small hole. 341 00:15:17,083 --> 00:15:19,252 At the end of the evening, they went home, 342 00:15:19,252 --> 00:15:21,838 ‐had supper, went to bed. ‐‐ 343 00:15:21,838 --> 00:15:23,422 Next day, they come up, and the hole 344 00:15:23,422 --> 00:15:25,341 ‐is filled with water. ‐Okay. 345 00:15:25,341 --> 00:15:28,761 And floating in the water is an oak leaf and an acorn. 346 00:15:28,761 --> 00:15:31,347 ‐Wow. I don't know that my father 347 00:15:31,347 --> 00:15:33,474 thought that this was a... 348 00:15:33,474 --> 00:15:36,227 a leaf from the canopy trees. 349 00:15:36,227 --> 00:15:38,104 - ‐ - It was part 350 00:15:38,104 --> 00:15:39,522 of the filtration system, 351 00:15:39,522 --> 00:15:41,232 and it was coming from underneath, 352 00:15:41,232 --> 00:15:42,942 where they used eelgrass. 353 00:15:42,942 --> 00:15:44,318 ‐Okay. ‐Coconut fiber. 354 00:15:44,318 --> 00:15:46,362 Coconut fiber. Thank you. 355 00:15:46,362 --> 00:15:48,281 And sometimes branches. 356 00:15:48,281 --> 00:15:49,699 ‐ 357 00:15:49,699 --> 00:15:51,450 In 1850, 358 00:15:51,450 --> 00:15:54,996 while excavating beneath the beach at Smith's Cove, 359 00:15:54,996 --> 00:15:56,831 members of the Truro Company 360 00:15:56,831 --> 00:15:59,709 reported finding a dense layer of coconut fiber 361 00:15:59,709 --> 00:16:02,211 covering the five stone box drains. 362 00:16:02,211 --> 00:16:05,214 Because the nearest indigenous coconut trees 363 00:16:05,214 --> 00:16:08,301 are more than 1,500 miles away from Oak Island, 364 00:16:08,301 --> 00:16:09,969 the workers speculated 365 00:16:09,969 --> 00:16:12,847 that the material was used to act as a filter 366 00:16:12,847 --> 00:16:15,641 to keep debris out of the flooding system. 367 00:16:15,641 --> 00:16:18,227 This is where the leaf is. 368 00:16:18,227 --> 00:16:19,562 And you don't mind we open it? 369 00:16:19,562 --> 00:16:22,273 No, I don't mind that you open it. 370 00:16:23,316 --> 00:16:26,319 Is anything around it or just the leaf? 371 00:16:26,319 --> 00:16:28,738 Just the leaf, looks like. 372 00:16:30,239 --> 00:16:32,700 ‐Still sticking together. ‐Whoa. 373 00:16:32,700 --> 00:16:34,952 Looks like a twin. 374 00:16:34,952 --> 00:16:36,871 Wow. 375 00:16:36,871 --> 00:16:38,497 Have you brought some acorns, 376 00:16:38,497 --> 00:16:41,792 ‐as well? Great. ‐Yes. Yes, we... 377 00:16:41,792 --> 00:16:43,920 - They're little, aren't they? - They're tiny. 378 00:16:43,920 --> 00:16:47,506 Well, these are markedly different if they're mature. 379 00:16:47,506 --> 00:16:48,883 ‐ 380 00:16:48,883 --> 00:16:50,635 Well, the botanist needs to see this. 381 00:16:50,635 --> 00:16:53,512 Exactly. To put this all in perspective, 382 00:16:53,512 --> 00:16:55,348 the reason we think this is important 383 00:16:55,348 --> 00:16:58,517 is that, let's say, this leaf and these oak... these acorns, 384 00:16:58,517 --> 00:17:00,394 say that it... 385 00:17:00,394 --> 00:17:03,022 You know, this is an oak that normally is found 386 00:17:03,022 --> 00:17:04,607 in Southern France. 387 00:17:04,607 --> 00:17:06,067 - ‐Right. - Well, then, 388 00:17:06,067 --> 00:17:07,777 then we have some meaning. I mean, 389 00:17:07,777 --> 00:17:09,528 - ‐this might tell a story. - ‐ 390 00:17:09,528 --> 00:17:12,823 Could this oak leaf and acorn, 391 00:17:12,823 --> 00:17:15,368 which Robert Restall Sr. reportedly found 392 00:17:15,368 --> 00:17:16,994 in the flooding system 393 00:17:16,994 --> 00:17:19,247 at Smith's Cove, offer an important clue 394 00:17:19,247 --> 00:17:21,290 as to the exact species of oak tree 395 00:17:21,290 --> 00:17:24,794 that some have speculated to be of a foreign origin? 396 00:17:24,794 --> 00:17:27,421 - I'm keenly interested in that. - ‐ 397 00:17:27,421 --> 00:17:29,090 : I think we need to put that leaf back 398 00:17:29,090 --> 00:17:31,884 in that envelope carefully as we can and then get 399 00:17:31,884 --> 00:17:33,386 Dr. Rodger Evans to look at it. 400 00:17:33,386 --> 00:17:34,804 Thank you for bringing this. 401 00:17:34,804 --> 00:17:36,556 Absolutely. 402 00:17:36,556 --> 00:17:40,226 And again, kudos to your parents for saving it. 403 00:17:40,226 --> 00:17:42,270 This is excellent. Excellent stuff. 404 00:17:42,270 --> 00:17:44,397 You know, we're gonna get this analyzed, and we'll certainly 405 00:17:44,397 --> 00:17:47,108 report back to you what we find. 406 00:17:47,108 --> 00:17:49,318 ‐Wonderful. Okay. ‐All right. 407 00:17:52,446 --> 00:17:55,783 Following their meeting in the war room, 408 00:17:55,783 --> 00:17:59,245 Rick takes Richard Restall to Lot 13 409 00:17:59,245 --> 00:18:00,997 to see something he has not seen 410 00:18:00,997 --> 00:18:02,999 for more than half a century: 411 00:18:02,999 --> 00:18:05,751 the remains of a small wooden cabin 412 00:18:05,751 --> 00:18:08,421 that he and his brother, Bobby Restall Jr. 413 00:18:08,421 --> 00:18:11,924 shared for six years while living on Oak Island. 414 00:18:11,924 --> 00:18:16,137 Today, it sits on property belonging to Tom Nolan, 415 00:18:16,137 --> 00:18:18,180 where it was moved to some years ago 416 00:18:18,180 --> 00:18:21,017 by his late father, Fred Nolan. 417 00:18:21,017 --> 00:18:23,853 Hey, guys. ‐Hey, guys. 418 00:18:23,853 --> 00:18:26,314 ‐Wow. ‐There she is. 419 00:18:26,314 --> 00:18:29,150 Wow. That is rough shape. 420 00:18:29,150 --> 00:18:30,568 All right. 421 00:18:31,569 --> 00:18:33,571 Well... 422 00:18:35,531 --> 00:18:38,242 Sure doesn't look the way it used to. 423 00:18:39,285 --> 00:18:40,828 So, that... 424 00:18:40,828 --> 00:18:42,538 would be a shelf. 425 00:18:42,538 --> 00:18:44,832 There were batteries below. There was a radio, which... 426 00:18:44,832 --> 00:18:47,543 Bobby always turned the dials on the radio. 427 00:18:47,543 --> 00:18:49,462 Sure. Sure. 428 00:18:49,462 --> 00:18:52,590 I might have bad music taste or something. 429 00:18:52,590 --> 00:18:55,801 And, when I walked in, that was my bunk, 430 00:18:55,801 --> 00:18:58,679 ‐because his bunk had the window. ‐I see. 431 00:18:58,679 --> 00:19:00,389 He was the watchman for the boat 432 00:19:00,389 --> 00:19:03,059 ‐and the equipment that was stored on the beach. ‐I see. 433 00:19:03,059 --> 00:19:06,020 So, the radio would play, and I would read my stuff. 434 00:19:06,020 --> 00:19:07,813 Bobby would be writing letters 435 00:19:07,813 --> 00:19:09,398 or finishing his journal. 436 00:19:10,983 --> 00:19:15,529 And that was the sum and total of our existence. 437 00:19:15,529 --> 00:19:18,324 That was it. It was pretty Spartan. 438 00:19:20,368 --> 00:19:22,912 Living in the shack with my brother was... 439 00:19:22,912 --> 00:19:26,123 it seemed rather strict sometimes. 440 00:19:26,123 --> 00:19:28,084 You know, lights out when he said. 441 00:19:28,084 --> 00:19:30,670 Music when he said. 442 00:19:30,670 --> 00:19:32,630 And so on. So... 443 00:19:34,090 --> 00:19:35,925 When my brother was responsible for me, 444 00:19:35,925 --> 00:19:38,844 he was very serious about it. 445 00:19:38,844 --> 00:19:40,846 So, he was protective. 446 00:19:40,846 --> 00:19:43,599 I'll give him that. Um... 447 00:19:43,599 --> 00:19:46,185 I wonder if he would have turned into 448 00:19:46,185 --> 00:19:49,188 as headstrong a person as my father 449 00:19:49,188 --> 00:19:51,232 or my mother. 450 00:19:51,232 --> 00:19:54,860 And it seemed sort of inevitable, 451 00:19:54,860 --> 00:19:57,279 but guess we'll never know. 452 00:19:59,782 --> 00:20:02,702 So, Ricky, it was really Scott and Doug 453 00:20:02,702 --> 00:20:06,414 who came up with the idea of refurbishing the cabin. 454 00:20:06,414 --> 00:20:09,166 ‐It's a little side project we don't mind taking on. ‐Yeah. 455 00:20:09,166 --> 00:20:11,335 I see. Right. Well, keep it as sparse as you can, 456 00:20:11,335 --> 00:20:15,005 because, there was nothing fancy about that shack. 457 00:20:15,005 --> 00:20:18,801 It was a toolshed when they built it, I think, 458 00:20:18,801 --> 00:20:20,386 and it became a residence when the whole family 459 00:20:20,386 --> 00:20:21,887 moved to the island. 460 00:20:21,887 --> 00:20:24,807 And finding this place still sort of together 461 00:20:24,807 --> 00:20:27,935 is, something of a‐a miracle, maybe. 462 00:20:27,935 --> 00:20:29,979 60 years. That's a long time. 463 00:20:29,979 --> 00:20:32,440 As I was listening to Ricky, 464 00:20:32,440 --> 00:20:34,567 it was like he was reliving the past. 465 00:20:34,567 --> 00:20:35,943 It hearkens back 466 00:20:35,943 --> 00:20:37,945 to a much more innocent time on the island. 467 00:20:37,945 --> 00:20:41,407 They were connecting their activities as a family. 468 00:20:41,407 --> 00:20:44,577 We now call ourselves an Oak Island family, 469 00:20:44,577 --> 00:20:46,746 so there's a connection there. 470 00:20:46,746 --> 00:20:48,247 I thought it was 471 00:20:48,247 --> 00:20:50,666 a healing moment, but only Ricky can tell you 472 00:20:50,666 --> 00:20:53,919 what has transpired within his mind 473 00:20:53,919 --> 00:20:56,005 as he recalled these things. 474 00:20:56,005 --> 00:20:57,757 All I can say is, Ricky, 475 00:20:57,757 --> 00:20:59,967 it's been a privilege and an honor, and I... 476 00:20:59,967 --> 00:21:02,303 At the point at which we refurbish this 477 00:21:02,303 --> 00:21:05,473 and put it in position, to complete the story, 478 00:21:05,473 --> 00:21:07,641 we would ask you to please come back. 479 00:21:07,641 --> 00:21:10,227 ‐For sure. ‐You're never a stranger here. 480 00:21:10,227 --> 00:21:12,480 ‐Remember that. ‐I'll test out the bunks. 481 00:21:12,480 --> 00:21:14,231 Okeydoke. Thank you. 482 00:21:14,231 --> 00:21:16,025 ‐Thanks, Ricky. Appreciate it. ‐Thank you. 483 00:21:16,025 --> 00:21:18,027 Thank you. 484 00:21:22,239 --> 00:21:24,283 It is the beginning 485 00:21:24,283 --> 00:21:27,244 of a bitterly cold day on Oak Island, 486 00:21:27,244 --> 00:21:29,747 one that serves as a harsh reminder 487 00:21:29,747 --> 00:21:31,957 that another North Atlantic winter 488 00:21:31,957 --> 00:21:34,126 is just a few short weeks away. 489 00:21:34,126 --> 00:21:35,961 And while preparations 490 00:21:35,961 --> 00:21:37,963 for the next major digging operation continue 491 00:21:37,963 --> 00:21:40,132 in the Money Pit area, 492 00:21:40,132 --> 00:21:42,802 at the Oak Island Research Center, 493 00:21:42,802 --> 00:21:44,470 brothers Rick and Marty Lagina, 494 00:21:44,470 --> 00:21:46,472 along with their partner, 495 00:21:46,472 --> 00:21:48,307 Craig Tester, are joined once again 496 00:21:48,307 --> 00:21:50,976 by Richard Restall and Lee Lamb. 497 00:21:50,976 --> 00:21:52,144 ‐Hey. ‐This is Dr. Rodger Evans 498 00:21:52,144 --> 00:21:53,771 ‐from Acadia University. ‐Hi, everybody. 499 00:21:53,771 --> 00:21:56,482 They have arranged for botanist Dr. Rodger Evans 500 00:21:56,482 --> 00:21:58,818 to examine the oak leaf and acorn 501 00:21:58,818 --> 00:22:02,780 that Lee shared with the team one day ago. 502 00:22:02,780 --> 00:22:04,990 So, we know we provided you 503 00:22:04,990 --> 00:22:06,742 with a bit of a mystery the other day. 504 00:22:06,742 --> 00:22:08,619 ‐We have a bit more of a mystery. ‐ 505 00:22:08,619 --> 00:22:10,621 And the Restalls were kind enough 506 00:22:10,621 --> 00:22:12,331 to bring samples from long ago: 507 00:22:12,331 --> 00:22:15,000 ‐an oak leaf and some acorns, which we would like ‐Okay. 508 00:22:15,000 --> 00:22:16,794 ‐your opinion on. ‐So, Dr. Evans, if you want to come right over here, 509 00:22:16,794 --> 00:22:18,754 you can‐‐ got a microscope set up for you, too, 510 00:22:18,754 --> 00:22:20,047 ‐in case you want to use it. ‐Okay, great. 511 00:22:20,047 --> 00:22:22,800 This leaf was actually... 512 00:22:22,800 --> 00:22:27,012 pulled from what Lee and Ricky's father believed was part 513 00:22:27,012 --> 00:22:30,641 ‐of the flood system on Oak Island 60 years ago. ‐Okay. Wow. 514 00:22:30,641 --> 00:22:32,351 ‐Yeah, and they've kept it preserved like that. ‐And it's still‐‐ 515 00:22:32,351 --> 00:22:34,895 ‐That's great. ‐So, what we're after is, 516 00:22:34,895 --> 00:22:36,313 do you think it's indigenous? Do you think there's 517 00:22:36,313 --> 00:22:37,565 anything special about it? 518 00:22:37,565 --> 00:22:38,983 Can you tell where it might have come from? 519 00:22:38,983 --> 00:22:40,818 ‐Sure. ‐And then, also... 520 00:22:42,361 --> 00:22:43,696 There we go. 521 00:22:43,696 --> 00:22:45,698 Whoa. ‐That's one of the acorns, 522 00:22:45,698 --> 00:22:47,992 believe it or not, that's been kept all these years, too. 523 00:22:47,992 --> 00:22:49,201 It's tiny. 524 00:22:49,201 --> 00:22:50,870 Isn't it? ‐When we compared them 525 00:22:50,870 --> 00:22:53,372 to the oaks that were around us, 526 00:22:53,372 --> 00:22:54,748 this looks different. 527 00:22:56,333 --> 00:22:57,585 There you go. Acorns. 528 00:22:57,585 --> 00:22:58,586 So, what about these acorns? 529 00:22:58,586 --> 00:23:00,504 The rest are intact, right? 530 00:23:00,504 --> 00:23:02,715 Did this leaf come from the‐‐ from the tree 531 00:23:02,715 --> 00:23:05,384 ‐that these fruits came from? ‐I'm sure it did. 532 00:23:05,384 --> 00:23:06,844 Was it on the same branch, you think? 533 00:23:06,844 --> 00:23:09,555 It was described to me as‐as the nuts‐‐ 534 00:23:09,555 --> 00:23:12,224 if that's what you call 'em‐‐ came in a cluster, 535 00:23:12,224 --> 00:23:13,934 ‐in the normal, um... ‐So they were on a branch 536 00:23:13,934 --> 00:23:14,894 ‐when they came? ‐Yeah. 537 00:23:14,894 --> 00:23:16,270 Yeah. In the intervening years, 538 00:23:16,270 --> 00:23:18,063 ‐the stuff has rattled around. ‐Has‐‐ Yeah. 539 00:23:18,063 --> 00:23:19,440 Yeah, yeah, for sure. 540 00:23:19,440 --> 00:23:23,235 Okay, so let's have a look at this acorn. 541 00:23:23,235 --> 00:23:25,738 I can tell you right now 542 00:23:25,738 --> 00:23:28,782 that these fruits probably are not viable. 543 00:23:28,782 --> 00:23:31,994 - Yeah. - ‐ As you can see, 544 00:23:31,994 --> 00:23:33,746 they're empty. 545 00:23:33,746 --> 00:23:36,081 ‐‐ ‐So, that black material 546 00:23:36,081 --> 00:23:39,001 ‐may have been the original seed. ‐‐‐ 547 00:23:39,001 --> 00:23:41,420 And the other thing that I find really interesting 548 00:23:41,420 --> 00:23:45,090 is that yellow material that you can see... 549 00:23:45,090 --> 00:23:46,592 ‐‐ ‐Um, 550 00:23:46,592 --> 00:23:49,470 what's happened over time is that that seed coat 551 00:23:49,470 --> 00:23:52,348 that was there has just dried up. 552 00:23:52,348 --> 00:23:54,475 It's fairly obvious to me 553 00:23:54,475 --> 00:23:56,268 ‐that these acorns are very different ‐ 554 00:23:56,268 --> 00:23:57,895 than the typical 555 00:23:57,895 --> 00:23:59,897 ‐red oak acorns. ‐ ‐‐ 556 00:23:59,897 --> 00:24:01,774 I guess there is a possibility that somebody brought a species 557 00:24:01,774 --> 00:24:03,233 of oak here and grew it, 558 00:24:03,233 --> 00:24:05,319 ‐and that's where these fruits would come from. ‐‐ 559 00:24:07,696 --> 00:24:09,782 A mysterious species of oak tree 560 00:24:09,782 --> 00:24:12,076 brought to Oak Island? 561 00:24:12,076 --> 00:24:15,120 Could it be from one of the so‐called canopy oaks 562 00:24:15,120 --> 00:24:17,498 that many Oak Island treasure hunters believed 563 00:24:17,498 --> 00:24:19,875 had been planted by the original depositors 564 00:24:19,875 --> 00:24:22,503 to act as a secret beacon marking the location 565 00:24:22,503 --> 00:24:25,130 of a vast treasure cache? 566 00:24:25,130 --> 00:24:28,801 It's very apparent from his initial analysis 567 00:24:28,801 --> 00:24:31,178 that this oak indeed is different. 568 00:24:31,178 --> 00:24:32,429 It's a clue. 569 00:24:32,429 --> 00:24:34,223 It's a pretty amazing clue, 570 00:24:34,223 --> 00:24:36,475 because, you know, the obvious question is, 571 00:24:36,475 --> 00:24:38,268 how'd it get here? Who brought it? 572 00:24:38,268 --> 00:24:40,646 Is there any chance that acorns 573 00:24:40,646 --> 00:24:43,023 would survive drifting across the Atlantic 574 00:24:43,023 --> 00:24:45,317 ‐and... ‐I would say that these 575 00:24:45,317 --> 00:24:47,987 ‐probably aren't that resistant to salt water. ‐Right. 576 00:24:47,987 --> 00:24:50,823 So, once the cap separates and water enters the... 577 00:24:50,823 --> 00:24:52,282 It would probably‐‐ it'd probably destroy it 578 00:24:52,282 --> 00:24:53,742 if it was salt water, I would think. 579 00:24:55,327 --> 00:24:56,537 For our search here, 580 00:24:56,537 --> 00:24:58,330 for what we're trying to figure out here, 581 00:24:58,330 --> 00:25:00,791 I‐I draw two conclusions. 582 00:25:00,791 --> 00:25:04,169 One, whatever the Restalls found 60 years ago‐‐ 583 00:25:04,169 --> 00:25:06,505 markedly different. 584 00:25:06,505 --> 00:25:08,173 Have to be a different species 585 00:25:08,173 --> 00:25:10,634 ‐than the native oaks. Okay. ‐Correct. Yeah. 586 00:25:10,634 --> 00:25:12,845 Which means this is significant. 587 00:25:12,845 --> 00:25:14,680 We need to find out, if we can, 588 00:25:14,680 --> 00:25:17,182 what is yet another non‐native species 589 00:25:17,182 --> 00:25:20,227 doing in a flood s‐system 590 00:25:20,227 --> 00:25:21,895 ‐or a box drain or whatever? ‐Sure. 591 00:25:21,895 --> 00:25:23,147 I mean, in their own way, 592 00:25:23,147 --> 00:25:25,858 to me, based on today's analysis, 593 00:25:25,858 --> 00:25:28,318 these are as interesting as the coconut fiber, 594 00:25:28,318 --> 00:25:30,696 ‐because it‐it's out of place. ‐ Yeah. 595 00:25:30,696 --> 00:25:33,198 ‐It doesn't belong there. ‐Yeah. It doesn't belong here. Yeah, yeah, yeah. 596 00:25:33,198 --> 00:25:34,658 Can we do any sort of genetic testing 597 00:25:34,658 --> 00:25:36,201 on those? Are they too old? 598 00:25:36,201 --> 00:25:38,328 ‐I think they're too old. Um... ‐Aw. 599 00:25:38,328 --> 00:25:40,873 Older material that isn't fresh, 600 00:25:40,873 --> 00:25:44,126 the amount of DNA information that you can get out of it 601 00:25:44,126 --> 00:25:45,502 becomes limited. 602 00:25:46,670 --> 00:25:48,714 All right, then. Great session. 603 00:25:48,714 --> 00:25:50,883 ‐Thank you very much. We really... ‐Yeah, my pleasure. Thank you. 604 00:25:50,883 --> 00:25:54,219 - Much appreciated. - Yeah, thanks. 605 00:25:54,219 --> 00:25:57,556 Following their meeting in the research center... 606 00:25:57,556 --> 00:25:59,016 Well, here we go. 607 00:25:59,016 --> 00:26:00,059 ...Rick and Marty, 608 00:26:00,059 --> 00:26:02,019 along with Lee and Richard, 609 00:26:02,019 --> 00:26:04,938 make their way to the Money Pit dig site. 610 00:26:04,938 --> 00:26:07,399 Through Doug's exhaustive research 611 00:26:07,399 --> 00:26:11,904 and we're utilizing your father's work, 612 00:26:11,904 --> 00:26:14,907 we now have a can positioned over the‐‐ 613 00:26:14,907 --> 00:26:17,576 an area that we believe holds a lot of promise. 614 00:26:17,576 --> 00:26:19,495 ‐ ‐If there's 615 00:26:19,495 --> 00:26:21,038 a treasure left up there, 616 00:26:21,038 --> 00:26:22,915 we have the equipment to get it. 617 00:26:22,915 --> 00:26:25,042 Well, it would be a nice ending... 618 00:26:25,042 --> 00:26:27,753 ‐Wouldn't it? ‐...to an exciting adventure. 619 00:26:27,753 --> 00:26:29,254 Yeah. True. 620 00:26:29,254 --> 00:26:31,882 As fate would have it, 621 00:26:31,882 --> 00:26:33,884 the team is about to begin digging 622 00:26:33,884 --> 00:26:35,552 at the very same location 623 00:26:35,552 --> 00:26:37,763 where Robert Restall Sr. believed 624 00:26:37,763 --> 00:26:40,432 the original Money Pit would be found. 625 00:26:40,432 --> 00:26:42,893 Hello, ladies and gentlemen. 626 00:26:42,893 --> 00:26:46,772 We have with us here the Restalls, 627 00:26:46,772 --> 00:26:49,566 ‐Lee Lamb and Ricky Restall, who have a... ‐Hi. 628 00:26:49,566 --> 00:26:52,319 ...long, storied and interesting history here. 629 00:26:54,363 --> 00:26:56,824 So, anyway, this is the thing. 630 00:26:56,824 --> 00:26:59,118 Rick, tell‐tell her how it works. 631 00:26:59,118 --> 00:27:01,787 Well, those big rams are gonna take 632 00:27:01,787 --> 00:27:04,373 that large can, grab onto it with a set of jaws 633 00:27:04,373 --> 00:27:07,209 and literally rotate it down into the ground. 634 00:27:07,209 --> 00:27:08,919 Right. Okay. 635 00:27:08,919 --> 00:27:11,338 Generally, in the past, we've named these cans. 636 00:27:11,338 --> 00:27:17,302 And so I think it's very apropos to name this can RF‐1, 637 00:27:17,302 --> 00:27:18,887 the Restall Family 1. 638 00:27:18,887 --> 00:27:20,305 For goodness' sake. 639 00:27:20,305 --> 00:27:21,974 ‐That's nice. ‐And I‐‐ and I hope 640 00:27:21,974 --> 00:27:24,059 that, at the bottom of that can, 641 00:27:24,059 --> 00:27:27,104 is what we have all sought for 225 years. 642 00:27:27,104 --> 00:27:28,897 I'm very honored 643 00:27:28,897 --> 00:27:32,484 that we were invited to be here at this time, 644 00:27:32,484 --> 00:27:33,861 'cause it is important to me. 645 00:27:33,861 --> 00:27:37,823 This is the first time I've seen the big equipment working 646 00:27:37,823 --> 00:27:40,325 and seen the up‐to‐date stuff that you're doing. 647 00:27:40,325 --> 00:27:41,994 I do remember, you and I, 648 00:27:41,994 --> 00:27:43,829 we were looking at Bobby's journals 649 00:27:43,829 --> 00:27:46,665 and we turned to August 17 and I made you 650 00:27:46,665 --> 00:27:49,042 a promise then that we would be able, 651 00:27:49,042 --> 00:27:50,919 at some point, to fill that last page in. 652 00:27:50,919 --> 00:27:53,338 Now it's about all of us, 653 00:27:53,338 --> 00:27:55,549 including you and Ricky, filling that last page in, 654 00:27:55,549 --> 00:27:57,676 and I hope this is the start of it. 655 00:27:57,676 --> 00:28:00,012 ‐Well, thank you. 656 00:28:00,012 --> 00:28:02,639 I hope it works out, because it's about time. 657 00:28:02,639 --> 00:28:04,016 All right, without further ado, 658 00:28:04,016 --> 00:28:05,475 Vanessa? 659 00:28:05,475 --> 00:28:06,810 Shall we? 660 00:28:06,810 --> 00:28:08,937 The Restalls, unlike any 661 00:28:08,937 --> 00:28:10,188 of the other searchers, 662 00:28:10,188 --> 00:28:13,150 this was a‐a family adventure, really, 663 00:28:13,150 --> 00:28:15,694 and‐and, certainly, it culminated 664 00:28:15,694 --> 00:28:17,654 in a tragedy. So, when they come back, 665 00:28:17,654 --> 00:28:21,158 are kind enough to come back and‐and revisit and‐‐ 666 00:28:21,158 --> 00:28:24,494 It's‐it's a connection to the past. 667 00:28:24,494 --> 00:28:26,914 That, in and of itself, is a small piece of treasure, 668 00:28:26,914 --> 00:28:29,374 and they value it, as do we. 669 00:28:31,627 --> 00:28:33,337 There it goes! 670 00:28:33,337 --> 00:28:35,505 - Wow. - There you go. 671 00:28:35,505 --> 00:28:37,215 ‐You're oscillating. ‐Okay. Great. 672 00:28:37,215 --> 00:28:39,051 You're‐you're digging here on Oak Island. 673 00:28:39,051 --> 00:28:40,385 Wow. 674 00:28:40,385 --> 00:28:42,012 Impressive. 675 00:28:42,012 --> 00:28:43,388 ‐ ‐MARTY: Pretty cool. 676 00:28:43,388 --> 00:28:44,848 And now we move forward. 677 00:28:44,848 --> 00:28:46,058 Sempre avanti. 678 00:28:46,058 --> 00:28:47,392 Gorgeous. 679 00:28:47,392 --> 00:28:50,312 All that remains is to find it. 680 00:28:56,485 --> 00:28:59,947 With the start of another day on Oak Island... 681 00:28:59,947 --> 00:29:01,239 How are you doing this morning? 682 00:29:01,239 --> 00:29:02,616 Good. Yourself? ‐Good. 683 00:29:02,616 --> 00:29:04,618 ...Craig Tester joins Vanessa Lucido 684 00:29:04,618 --> 00:29:06,078 and other members of the team 685 00:29:06,078 --> 00:29:09,081 at the Money Pit site to check on the progress 686 00:29:09,081 --> 00:29:11,083 of the RF‐1 shaft. 687 00:29:11,083 --> 00:29:14,127 It is here that recent seismic scanning identified 688 00:29:14,127 --> 00:29:16,672 a 13‐foot‐wide void 689 00:29:16,672 --> 00:29:19,091 matching the diameter of the original Money Pit 690 00:29:19,091 --> 00:29:22,094 at a depth of some 160 feet. 691 00:29:22,094 --> 00:29:24,763 How deep is the hammer grab? 692 00:29:24,763 --> 00:29:26,264 About 86 now. 693 00:29:26,264 --> 00:29:28,100 Good. Well, it's moving along. 694 00:29:28,100 --> 00:29:29,851 Yeah. It's moving along nicely. 695 00:29:29,851 --> 00:29:32,145 Still getting full buckets with the grab, 696 00:29:32,145 --> 00:29:35,899 and the oscillator's advancing at the rate I'd expect it to. 697 00:29:36,942 --> 00:29:38,819 Still pulling out lots of wood. 698 00:29:38,819 --> 00:29:40,696 Okay. The ones 699 00:29:40,696 --> 00:29:42,948 that are square, six by six, that's Chappell. 700 00:29:42,948 --> 00:29:47,327 ‐So that part's gonna be coming up the entire way. ‐Okay. 701 00:29:47,327 --> 00:29:49,955 ‐Awesome. ‐So, you know, from 100 to 120 feet 702 00:29:49,955 --> 00:29:51,957 ‐will probably be a key area. ‐Okay. 703 00:29:51,957 --> 00:29:54,918 We'll let you know if we have anything unusual 704 00:29:54,918 --> 00:29:56,628 ‐or... ‐Okay. 705 00:29:56,628 --> 00:29:58,797 Because we seem to have honed in on what we want, 706 00:29:58,797 --> 00:30:01,216 now it's time to be very careful 707 00:30:01,216 --> 00:30:03,010 looking at these cuttings, so we don't miss 708 00:30:03,010 --> 00:30:05,178 what might be there for us to find. 709 00:30:05,178 --> 00:30:07,639 And we've basically got this down 710 00:30:07,639 --> 00:30:09,933 to a pretty smooth‐running machine. 711 00:30:09,933 --> 00:30:13,729 The hammer grab dumps the spoils in the jersey barrier. 712 00:30:13,729 --> 00:30:15,564 Gary metal detects it. 713 00:30:15,564 --> 00:30:18,358 And then it's washed on the wash table. 714 00:30:18,358 --> 00:30:21,361 And it's all occurring, you know, like, um... 715 00:30:21,361 --> 00:30:22,988 like a machine. 716 00:30:22,988 --> 00:30:24,865 Hey, Jack. 717 00:30:24,865 --> 00:30:26,825 How's it going, Steve? 718 00:30:26,825 --> 00:30:29,828 Because all previous searchers have never been able 719 00:30:29,828 --> 00:30:31,830 to excavate the original Money Pit much below 720 00:30:31,830 --> 00:30:34,708 the 90‐foot level due to the booby‐trapped flood tunnel, 721 00:30:34,708 --> 00:30:37,210 the Oak Island team will begin 722 00:30:37,210 --> 00:30:38,670 thoroughly sifting and searching 723 00:30:38,670 --> 00:30:41,173 through all spoils unearthed below 100 feet 724 00:30:41,173 --> 00:30:43,842 for any important clues, artifacts 725 00:30:43,842 --> 00:30:46,011 or, hopefully, treasure. 726 00:30:48,680 --> 00:30:50,390 We just need to pick out anything 727 00:30:50,390 --> 00:30:52,726 that seems out of the ordinary. 728 00:30:52,726 --> 00:30:54,144 Or man‐made. 729 00:30:55,187 --> 00:30:57,397 Anything that's odd. 730 00:31:03,528 --> 00:31:04,821 There's something. 731 00:31:05,781 --> 00:31:07,532 Look at this. 732 00:31:07,532 --> 00:31:09,201 I think we've got some old pottery. 733 00:31:09,201 --> 00:31:10,702 Yeah. 734 00:31:10,702 --> 00:31:13,830 ‐That's... ‐That's a huge chunk of it. 735 00:31:13,830 --> 00:31:17,375 That's really old pottery, Steve. 736 00:31:17,375 --> 00:31:20,128 Look at how thick it is. 737 00:31:20,128 --> 00:31:22,089 ‐The thicker, the older, too. ‐The thicker, the older. 738 00:31:22,089 --> 00:31:24,341 And that's the thickest pottery I've seen at this wash table. 739 00:31:24,341 --> 00:31:26,593 Quite honestly, if this is really old, 740 00:31:26,593 --> 00:31:29,429 this could be a good indication that we're inside 741 00:31:29,429 --> 00:31:31,389 ‐the original Money Pit. ‐‐ 742 00:31:31,389 --> 00:31:34,226 Or left behind by searchers. 743 00:31:34,226 --> 00:31:38,230 Maybe left behind by depositors, too. 744 00:31:38,230 --> 00:31:41,733 We're on the right track! 745 00:31:41,733 --> 00:31:45,070 While Jack and Steve continue to search 746 00:31:45,070 --> 00:31:47,864 for more important clues at the wash table... 747 00:31:50,450 --> 00:31:52,786 - ‐Going in. - ...Gary Drayton 748 00:31:52,786 --> 00:31:54,913 and geologist Terry Matheson 749 00:31:54,913 --> 00:31:58,416 are carefully monitoring the freshly excavated material 750 00:31:58,416 --> 00:32:00,418 retrieved by the hammer grab tool. 751 00:32:09,052 --> 00:32:10,679 ‐ ‐We've got a target here. 752 00:32:10,679 --> 00:32:12,097 What do you got? 753 00:32:12,097 --> 00:32:15,308 Ooh! What have we got here? 754 00:32:15,308 --> 00:32:17,185 Check this out. 755 00:32:18,979 --> 00:32:21,565 That's an old pickaxe, a broken pickaxe. 756 00:32:21,565 --> 00:32:23,066 That is serious. 757 00:32:24,609 --> 00:32:27,779 What a sweet find! ‐Right on. 758 00:32:27,779 --> 00:32:30,448 Wow. I mean, this is really, really cool, Terry. 759 00:32:30,448 --> 00:32:31,950 That's something, man. 760 00:32:31,950 --> 00:32:33,451 ‐This is really old, mate. ‐Yeah. 761 00:32:33,451 --> 00:32:36,329 We're in the 1700s. This is original stuff. 762 00:32:36,329 --> 00:32:39,791 A pickaxe found some 90 feet deep 763 00:32:39,791 --> 00:32:42,669 in what the team believes could be the original Money Pit? 764 00:32:42,669 --> 00:32:44,462 Could it have been left there 765 00:32:44,462 --> 00:32:47,299 by searchers looking for the fabled treasure vault? 766 00:32:47,299 --> 00:32:51,178 Or might it have been left behind by whoever buried it? 767 00:32:51,178 --> 00:32:54,514 This could've been used by the guys who made the Money Pit. 768 00:32:54,514 --> 00:32:56,474 This is what we're all hoping. 769 00:32:56,474 --> 00:32:58,310 ‐You got your phone, mate? ‐I do. 770 00:32:58,310 --> 00:33:00,145 Yeah, we should call Rick and Marty. 771 00:33:00,145 --> 00:33:01,688 Marty and Rick are gonna love this. 772 00:33:01,688 --> 00:33:03,565 That's gonna put a smile on their face for sure. 773 00:33:03,565 --> 00:33:05,817 What a sweet find! 774 00:33:05,817 --> 00:33:07,694 It's really sweet. 775 00:33:10,906 --> 00:33:12,866 - Hey, guys. - What you got there, 776 00:33:12,866 --> 00:33:15,410 ‐Gary? ‐Finally making some good discoveries. 777 00:33:15,410 --> 00:33:16,786 After being alerted 778 00:33:16,786 --> 00:33:18,830 to Gary Drayton's discovery 779 00:33:18,830 --> 00:33:21,791 of a possibly ancient pickaxe in the RF‐1 spoils, 780 00:33:21,791 --> 00:33:24,252 brothers Rick and Marty Lagina arrive 781 00:33:24,252 --> 00:33:27,297 at the Money Pit drill site. 782 00:33:27,297 --> 00:33:29,758 ‐That is cool. ‐Yeah. 783 00:33:29,758 --> 00:33:33,053 Another old pick in a different place. 784 00:33:33,053 --> 00:33:36,806 The same style pick that came out the back of the swamp. 785 00:33:36,806 --> 00:33:38,683 Now we got one in the Money Pit. 786 00:33:39,976 --> 00:33:41,937 Ooh.! 787 00:33:41,937 --> 00:33:44,564 ‐Wait. ‐Now look at that! 788 00:33:44,564 --> 00:33:46,650 That is a really old pick! 789 00:33:46,650 --> 00:33:48,818 Eight weeks ago, while metal detecting 790 00:33:48,818 --> 00:33:52,906 near the northernmost area of the triangle‐shaped swamp, 791 00:33:52,906 --> 00:33:56,701 Gary and Jack Begley discovered a similar digging tool. 792 00:33:56,701 --> 00:34:00,413 One which blacksmithing expert Carmen Legge later determined 793 00:34:00,413 --> 00:34:05,126 to date back to the mid‐1700s. 794 00:34:05,126 --> 00:34:08,880 Could this pickaxe, found in Borehole RF‐1, 795 00:34:08,880 --> 00:34:11,258 be related to the 18th century pickaxe 796 00:34:11,258 --> 00:34:14,261 that the team discovered earlier this year? 797 00:34:14,261 --> 00:34:16,930 And might it also have had something to do 798 00:34:16,930 --> 00:34:19,599 with the 13‐foot‐wide chamber identified 799 00:34:19,599 --> 00:34:24,604 by seismic scanning at a depth of 160 feet? 800 00:34:24,604 --> 00:34:26,523 Do you think that's broken? 801 00:34:26,523 --> 00:34:27,983 Yes, I do. 802 00:34:27,983 --> 00:34:31,111 And maybe the shaft was broken 803 00:34:31,111 --> 00:34:33,738 on purpose, and it's for tunneling. 804 00:34:33,738 --> 00:34:35,907 ‐Yeah. You get a close hit? ‐Yeah. 805 00:34:35,907 --> 00:34:40,161 This looks more substantial and thicker. 806 00:34:40,161 --> 00:34:43,581 I was really impressed by the handle. It was huge. 807 00:34:43,581 --> 00:34:46,710 You wouldn't want to grab that and swing it all day long. 808 00:34:46,710 --> 00:34:49,421 It was quite a handle, quite a pick. 809 00:34:49,421 --> 00:34:51,965 To swing that for eight, ten hours a day, you'd be tired 810 00:34:51,965 --> 00:34:54,592 - ‐at the end of the day. - It's a cool artifact. 811 00:34:54,592 --> 00:34:58,013 I‐I could tell you without going to the venerable Carmen Legge, 812 00:34:58,013 --> 00:35:00,682 it was probably built long ago. 813 00:35:00,682 --> 00:35:02,475 It's a well‐made tool. 814 00:35:02,475 --> 00:35:06,062 Well, look, everything that's coming up here is 815 00:35:06,062 --> 00:35:07,522 interlaced with very old stuff. 816 00:35:07,522 --> 00:35:09,316 I think it looks really good. 817 00:35:09,316 --> 00:35:10,692 Yeah. 818 00:35:10,692 --> 00:35:12,527 Well, we need to get going. 819 00:35:12,527 --> 00:35:14,821 It's time to get crack‐a‐lacking. 820 00:35:14,821 --> 00:35:16,489 It's very possible 821 00:35:16,489 --> 00:35:19,117 that we are within the Money Pit collapse zone, so, 822 00:35:19,117 --> 00:35:21,286 we need to separate the material that is 823 00:35:21,286 --> 00:35:24,164 relevant to the search, because we certainly have 824 00:35:24,164 --> 00:35:28,168 the possibility of locating the original Money Pit. 825 00:35:30,295 --> 00:35:32,088 Wow. That's impressive. 826 00:35:36,009 --> 00:35:37,677 It's a big timber. 827 00:35:37,677 --> 00:35:40,347 Want to get this one? 828 00:35:40,347 --> 00:35:42,474 That's a big one? 829 00:35:42,474 --> 00:35:44,559 That's a timber. 830 00:35:44,559 --> 00:35:47,646 - ‐One. - Two, three. 831 00:35:49,189 --> 00:35:50,774 Any luck in there? 832 00:35:50,774 --> 00:35:52,734 Really old wood. 833 00:35:52,734 --> 00:35:56,780 At the bottom of that scoop there, inside Billy's bucket, 834 00:35:56,780 --> 00:36:00,867 there's a really, really big, fantastic timber. 835 00:36:00,867 --> 00:36:03,244 Rick wanted us to take the big ones and set them aside. 836 00:36:03,244 --> 00:36:05,664 Ooh! What have we got here? 837 00:36:05,664 --> 00:36:07,499 Look at this one. 838 00:36:07,499 --> 00:36:10,001 We start pulling up some really impressive 839 00:36:10,001 --> 00:36:11,461 timbers. 840 00:36:11,461 --> 00:36:13,797 These were cut by hand. 841 00:36:13,797 --> 00:36:16,132 This should be original work. 842 00:36:16,132 --> 00:36:17,801 Come and check this out. 843 00:36:17,801 --> 00:36:19,636 Look at there. 844 00:36:19,636 --> 00:36:22,222 Look at all the wood. 845 00:36:22,222 --> 00:36:24,265 Yeah. 846 00:36:24,265 --> 00:36:25,767 Look at that piece there. 847 00:36:27,310 --> 00:36:28,770 That is spectacular. 848 00:36:28,770 --> 00:36:30,063 That's cool. 849 00:36:30,063 --> 00:36:31,356 I mean, that's not 850 00:36:31,356 --> 00:36:32,816 a modern design. 851 00:36:32,816 --> 00:36:34,693 - ‐That is really old. - That's old. 852 00:36:34,693 --> 00:36:37,112 With dowels, no less. Yeah. Yeah. 853 00:36:37,112 --> 00:36:38,905 Almost interlocking, 854 00:36:38,905 --> 00:36:40,990 - ‐like a key in a... a lock. - Yeah. 855 00:36:40,990 --> 00:36:43,118 This is like nothing we've seen before. 856 00:36:43,118 --> 00:36:45,036 This could be original wood. 857 00:36:45,036 --> 00:36:47,914 A doweled timber, possibly 858 00:36:47,914 --> 00:36:50,375 from the original Money Pit? 859 00:36:50,375 --> 00:36:53,169 Dating back to the early 7th century, 860 00:36:53,169 --> 00:36:56,297 a dowel is a kind of wooden fastener 861 00:36:56,297 --> 00:36:59,592 used to lock large planks or timbers together. 862 00:36:59,592 --> 00:37:02,262 Frequently used in shipbuilding, 863 00:37:02,262 --> 00:37:04,556 wooden dowels were considered more reliable 864 00:37:04,556 --> 00:37:06,766 than iron nails or spikes, 865 00:37:06,766 --> 00:37:09,269 which would rust and break down 866 00:37:09,269 --> 00:37:12,439 after prolonged exposure to water. 867 00:37:12,439 --> 00:37:17,152 This wood in RF‐1 was weird and unique. 868 00:37:17,152 --> 00:37:21,030 It was hand‐hewn lumber, it was massive. 869 00:37:21,030 --> 00:37:25,201 It was doweled together at the end with hand‐cut dowels. 870 00:37:25,201 --> 00:37:27,287 I'm going to be very curious 871 00:37:27,287 --> 00:37:30,165 about the dendrochronology on that. 872 00:37:30,165 --> 00:37:32,542 If those are older than 1795, 873 00:37:32,542 --> 00:37:35,628 we have to really think about what might've happened here. 874 00:37:35,628 --> 00:37:38,965 I think that's the one over there with the hole in it. 875 00:37:40,216 --> 00:37:42,135 Look at that. 876 00:37:42,135 --> 00:37:44,137 Yeah. ‐See those two marks there? 877 00:37:44,137 --> 00:37:46,723 They look like they was chiseled out of there. 878 00:37:46,723 --> 00:37:48,099 ‐Yeah, they do. ‐I just wondered 879 00:37:48,099 --> 00:37:50,685 if these two marks are‐are actual 880 00:37:50,685 --> 00:37:53,730 - ‐Roman numerals. - Wow. 881 00:37:56,816 --> 00:37:59,110 What do you think, Laird? 882 00:37:59,110 --> 00:38:01,654 Is that a Roman numeral "two"? 883 00:38:03,615 --> 00:38:05,533 Yeah. 884 00:38:05,533 --> 00:38:09,037 Terry, you got your brush? 885 00:38:09,037 --> 00:38:10,830 I do. 886 00:38:10,830 --> 00:38:12,290 Let's buff it up a little bit. 887 00:38:12,290 --> 00:38:13,792 Yeah, buff that up a little bit. 888 00:38:13,792 --> 00:38:15,293 Looks like some deliberate motion here. 889 00:38:15,293 --> 00:38:17,545 Yeah. ‐Some deliberate... 890 00:38:17,545 --> 00:38:19,422 swipes, perhaps. 891 00:38:19,422 --> 00:38:23,343 Well, guess where we've seen Roman numerals before. 892 00:38:23,343 --> 00:38:25,804 The U‐shaped structure. 893 00:38:25,804 --> 00:38:27,514 - ‐That'd be quite a tie‐in. - Yeah. 894 00:38:27,514 --> 00:38:28,932 Look at there. 895 00:38:28,932 --> 00:38:30,892 Yeah, I got a Roman numeral right here! 896 00:38:30,892 --> 00:38:32,310 Nice, Charles! 897 00:38:32,310 --> 00:38:34,020 "XI." I've got "11" right here. 898 00:38:34,020 --> 00:38:36,856 One year ago, after damming 899 00:38:36,856 --> 00:38:38,817 and draining Smith's Cove to search 900 00:38:38,817 --> 00:38:40,819 for the fabled stone box drains 901 00:38:40,819 --> 00:38:43,321 and the main flood tunnel connected to the Money Pit, 902 00:38:43,321 --> 00:38:46,032 Rick, Marty and the team unearthed 903 00:38:46,032 --> 00:38:48,243 the so‐called "U‐shaped structure"‐‐ 904 00:38:48,243 --> 00:38:52,705 a massive wooden formation also featuring Roman numerals. 905 00:38:52,705 --> 00:38:55,792 Incredibly, using a kind 906 00:38:55,792 --> 00:38:58,920 of tree‐ring testing method known as "dendrochronology," 907 00:38:58,920 --> 00:39:03,341 it was determined to have been constructed in 1769, 908 00:39:03,341 --> 00:39:05,510 more than a quarter century prior 909 00:39:05,510 --> 00:39:07,679 to the discovery of the Money Pit. 910 00:39:07,679 --> 00:39:12,058 Could this wood, found some 100 feet deep in RF‐1, 911 00:39:12,058 --> 00:39:14,686 be connected to the U‐shaped structure? 912 00:39:14,686 --> 00:39:18,022 And if so, might it also be evidence that the team has, 913 00:39:18,022 --> 00:39:21,860 at last, located the original treasure shaft? 914 00:39:23,528 --> 00:39:25,238 You see the Roman numerals, Rick? 915 00:39:26,739 --> 00:39:30,535 That looks carved in there, doesn't it? 916 00:39:30,535 --> 00:39:32,370 That's... That... Look at that. 917 00:39:32,370 --> 00:39:33,788 Quite different. 918 00:39:33,788 --> 00:39:35,415 Very different. 919 00:39:35,415 --> 00:39:37,375 I think the Roman numerals are cool. 920 00:39:37,375 --> 00:39:38,835 They were dramatic. 921 00:39:38,835 --> 00:39:41,379 I mean, there was... I was there. 922 00:39:41,379 --> 00:39:44,382 There was no doubt in my mind those were Roman numerals. 923 00:39:44,382 --> 00:39:46,050 There was artistry put into this thing. 924 00:39:46,050 --> 00:39:47,886 It wasn't a quick construct. 925 00:39:47,886 --> 00:39:50,179 This was meant to last. 926 00:39:50,179 --> 00:39:52,932 So, my thought would be 927 00:39:52,932 --> 00:39:54,809 that the old shaft is original. 928 00:39:54,809 --> 00:39:56,561 Could be. 929 00:39:56,561 --> 00:39:59,397 We'll have to look for more, um, 930 00:39:59,397 --> 00:40:01,274 Roman numerals in this jumble. 931 00:40:01,274 --> 00:40:03,860 So, it's on one side or another of the box joint. 932 00:40:03,860 --> 00:40:05,403 We'll have to take a look for that. 933 00:40:05,403 --> 00:40:08,907 Even 1769's impressive. This is... 934 00:40:08,907 --> 00:40:11,784 If this is the same date as the U‐shaped structure. 935 00:40:11,784 --> 00:40:14,078 And of course, we can have it dendro'd. 936 00:40:14,078 --> 00:40:15,747 ‐We can take a sample and have it dendro'd. ‐Yeah. 937 00:40:15,747 --> 00:40:17,916 We got to find some of these and dendro it, yeah. 938 00:40:17,916 --> 00:40:19,751 Well, we'll be able to go through this carefully. 939 00:40:19,751 --> 00:40:21,294 We're in a good spot. 940 00:40:21,294 --> 00:40:23,421 A really exciting day. 941 00:40:24,422 --> 00:40:27,342 As another week ends 942 00:40:27,342 --> 00:40:30,720 in the 225‐year history of the Oak Island treasure hunt, 943 00:40:30,720 --> 00:40:34,933 Rick, Marty, Craig and their team are convinced 944 00:40:34,933 --> 00:40:36,935 that not only have they found new clues 945 00:40:36,935 --> 00:40:38,436 that could finally help identify 946 00:40:38,436 --> 00:40:40,772 those who buried something of great value 947 00:40:40,772 --> 00:40:43,107 on Oak Island centuries ago. 948 00:40:43,107 --> 00:40:45,944 They may have also found the location 949 00:40:45,944 --> 00:40:49,447 of where they hid it‐‐ deep underground. 950 00:40:49,447 --> 00:40:52,951 And as what Rick and Marty Lagina refer to 951 00:40:52,951 --> 00:40:56,746 as "The Fellowship of the Dig" continues their search, 952 00:40:56,746 --> 00:40:58,790 they may soon uncover something much more valuable 953 00:40:58,790 --> 00:41:02,043 than a vault full of treasure. 954 00:41:02,043 --> 00:41:06,714 They may also find the facts behind an incredible story‐‐ 955 00:41:06,714 --> 00:41:11,302 one that, were it not for them, may have been lost to history 956 00:41:11,302 --> 00:41:13,262 forever. 957 00:41:15,348 --> 00:41:17,976 Next time on The Curse of Oak Island... 958 00:41:17,976 --> 00:41:19,310 Whoa, baby! 959 00:41:19,310 --> 00:41:20,979 Really big impressive timbers. 960 00:41:20,979 --> 00:41:23,815 - ‐We're back in the old stuff. - Whoa. Look at this! 961 00:41:23,815 --> 00:41:25,817 - ‐We have got more markings. - How about that? 962 00:41:25,817 --> 00:41:27,318 Wait. Stop. 963 00:41:27,318 --> 00:41:29,070 ‐What's that? There's no doubt about this. 964 00:41:29,070 --> 00:41:30,697 This is a man‐made tunnel. 965 00:41:30,697 --> 00:41:32,991 - ‐Ooh, look at that! - Wow! 966 00:41:32,991 --> 00:41:34,659 What kind of date are you putting on this? 967 00:41:35,952 --> 00:41:38,162 ‐This could be from the original Money Pit. ‐‐ 968 00:41:38,162 --> 00:41:39,247 It's getting tighter. 969 00:41:39,247 --> 00:41:41,165 Pressures are rising a little bit. 970 00:41:41,165 --> 00:41:42,333 ‐Whoa! ‐Whoa, whoa, whoa! 971 00:41:42,333 --> 00:41:43,835 ‐ ‐ 972 00:41:43,835 --> 00:41:45,336 CAPTIONING PROVIDED BY A+E NETWORKS 77595

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