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Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:01,543 --> 00:00:03,419 Tonight on The Curse of Oak Island... 2 00:00:03,420 --> 00:00:06,172 Guys, we're in the Eye of the Swamp now. 3 00:00:06,173 --> 00:00:08,883 There's definitely metal here, and it's iron. 4 00:00:08,884 --> 00:00:11,260 Any sign of wood or any sign of flat rock, 5 00:00:11,261 --> 00:00:13,012 it might be a sign of some kind of waterway. 6 00:00:13,013 --> 00:00:14,847 Here we go. Let's get after it. 7 00:00:14,848 --> 00:00:16,140 If we're gonna hit a flood tunnel, 8 00:00:16,141 --> 00:00:17,475 it's probably gonna be right here. 9 00:00:17,476 --> 00:00:18,518 See the peaks for iron? 10 00:00:18,519 --> 00:00:19,810 So these could be evidence 11 00:00:19,811 --> 00:00:21,437 of a large‐scale operation on Oak Island. 12 00:00:21,438 --> 00:00:23,940 At least some of the answers are in that swamp. 13 00:00:23,941 --> 00:00:27,027 The data says it might go back 300, 400 years. 14 00:00:31,323 --> 00:00:34,742 There is an island in the North Atlantic 15 00:00:34,743 --> 00:00:38,287 where people have been looking for an incredible treasure 16 00:00:38,288 --> 00:00:40,540 for more than 200 years. 17 00:00:40,541 --> 00:00:44,627 So far, they have found a stone slab 18 00:00:44,628 --> 00:00:47,421 with strange symbols carved into it, 19 00:00:47,422 --> 00:00:50,132 mysterious fragments of human bone, 20 00:00:50,133 --> 00:00:53,928 and a lead cross whose origin may stretch back 21 00:00:53,929 --> 00:00:56,639 to the days of the Knights Templar. 22 00:00:56,640 --> 00:01:00,978 To date, six men have died trying to solve the mystery. 23 00:01:02,229 --> 00:01:04,188 And, according to legend, 24 00:01:04,189 --> 00:01:07,316 one more will have to die 25 00:01:07,317 --> 00:01:10,571 before the treasure can be found. 26 00:01:21,832 --> 00:01:25,293 After learning that the mysterious ship‐shaped anomaly 27 00:01:25,294 --> 00:01:27,795 that lies at the center of the Oak Island swamp 28 00:01:27,796 --> 00:01:29,922 might, in fact, be a tunnel... 29 00:01:29,923 --> 00:01:33,676 We very much look forward to what you're about to tell us. 30 00:01:33,677 --> 00:01:34,719 ‐Gentlemen. ‐ Welcome. 31 00:01:34,720 --> 00:01:35,803 ‐Good morning. ‐Doctor. 32 00:01:35,804 --> 00:01:37,972 Rick Lagina and members 33 00:01:37,973 --> 00:01:40,016 of the team gather in the war room 34 00:01:40,017 --> 00:01:42,310 for a highly anticipated report 35 00:01:42,311 --> 00:01:45,896 by Canadian geoscientist Dr. Ian Spooner. 36 00:01:45,897 --> 00:01:49,692 Before you, uh, give us your presentation, Doctor, 37 00:01:49,693 --> 00:01:52,611 we'd like to get my brother and Craig on the line. 38 00:01:52,612 --> 00:01:54,280 Certainly. ‐Doug, if you'd be kind enough 39 00:01:54,281 --> 00:01:55,574 to bring them up. 40 00:01:57,200 --> 00:01:58,743 ‐Hey, guys. ‐ Hey. 41 00:01:58,744 --> 00:02:01,203 Hey, Marty. Craig. ‐Hi. 42 00:02:01,204 --> 00:02:03,164 So, all the usual suspects 43 00:02:03,165 --> 00:02:05,458 are around the table right now, 44 00:02:05,459 --> 00:02:07,293 but we have Dr. Ian Spooner here. 45 00:02:07,294 --> 00:02:09,462 He's come to give us his initial report. 46 00:02:09,463 --> 00:02:10,963 Great. 47 00:02:10,964 --> 00:02:14,008 So, anyway, I‐I'm gonna turn it over to Dr. Spooner. 48 00:02:14,009 --> 00:02:17,053 Dr. Spooner, what exactly do you do? 49 00:02:17,054 --> 00:02:18,971 So, I'm an environmental geoscientist, 50 00:02:18,972 --> 00:02:22,850 and my focus is primarily on wet environments. 51 00:02:22,851 --> 00:02:26,562 And not necessarily on rock, but on sediments. 52 00:02:26,563 --> 00:02:30,608 And when I was contacted to take a look at the site, 53 00:02:30,609 --> 00:02:32,401 you know, there were some pretty specific questions. 54 00:02:32,402 --> 00:02:33,986 How old is the swamp? 55 00:02:33,987 --> 00:02:35,988 Can we take a look at 56 00:02:35,989 --> 00:02:38,199 what kind of environments, uh, existed there through time? 57 00:02:38,200 --> 00:02:39,826 That's the kind of work I do. 58 00:02:41,453 --> 00:02:43,537 Come on, baby. Be something good. 59 00:02:43,538 --> 00:02:45,289 One week ago, 60 00:02:45,290 --> 00:02:47,833 while conducting a core drilling operation 61 00:02:47,834 --> 00:02:49,835 in an attempt to identify 62 00:02:49,836 --> 00:02:52,254 a mysterious 200‐foot‐long anomaly 63 00:02:52,255 --> 00:02:55,675 that was discovered in the swamp earlier this year... 64 00:02:55,676 --> 00:02:58,594 Here's the first core right here. 65 00:02:58,595 --> 00:03:01,347 ...Rick and Marty enlisted Dr. Spooner 66 00:03:01,348 --> 00:03:04,183 to examine the extracted materials. 67 00:03:04,184 --> 00:03:06,894 It was their hope that Dr. Spooner 68 00:03:06,895 --> 00:03:08,729 would find evidence, not only 69 00:03:08,730 --> 00:03:10,606 that the anomaly might be a sunken ship, 70 00:03:10,607 --> 00:03:15,277 but that the swamp itself could be man‐made. 71 00:03:15,278 --> 00:03:18,030 You're saying that whatever time that interface is, 72 00:03:18,031 --> 00:03:20,534 ‐it was sea bottom. ‐Yeah. 73 00:03:23,120 --> 00:03:25,287 So, by looking at the sediments, you can tell 74 00:03:25,288 --> 00:03:27,873 kind of how the swamp formed over time. 75 00:03:27,874 --> 00:03:29,041 How it filled in. 76 00:03:29,042 --> 00:03:30,459 ‐What the nature was. ‐Yeah. 77 00:03:30,460 --> 00:03:32,503 There's all sorts of techniques. 78 00:03:32,504 --> 00:03:35,714 I look for cores that have a high sedimentation rate. 79 00:03:35,715 --> 00:03:37,591 So the sediment's coming in rapidly. 80 00:03:37,592 --> 00:03:40,052 That means that as I work my way through the core, 81 00:03:40,053 --> 00:03:43,055 every centimeter represents maybe ten years. 82 00:03:43,056 --> 00:03:45,391 And so it's like having a book. 83 00:03:45,392 --> 00:03:47,393 Yeah. I go back in time, 84 00:03:47,394 --> 00:03:51,730 but I use the records that wetlands and lakes capture 85 00:03:51,731 --> 00:03:54,733 to rebuild that story, that history. 86 00:03:54,734 --> 00:03:56,152 Okay. Well, 87 00:03:56,153 --> 00:03:57,611 what did this book say? 88 00:03:59,948 --> 00:04:01,449 We got some initial data, 89 00:04:01,450 --> 00:04:04,410 and what the book so far says, 90 00:04:04,411 --> 00:04:06,454 it's some kind of depressed feature 91 00:04:06,455 --> 00:04:08,122 ‐in the landscape. ‐Right. 92 00:04:08,123 --> 00:04:10,583 The longest core we possibly could get 93 00:04:10,584 --> 00:04:14,295 really suggests to me that it's fairly young. 94 00:04:14,296 --> 00:04:18,340 It might go back maybe 300, 400 years. 95 00:04:18,341 --> 00:04:20,092 ‐Okay. ‐Aren't you suggesting, then, 96 00:04:20,093 --> 00:04:22,303 that that's man‐made? 97 00:04:22,304 --> 00:04:24,221 That could be the case. 98 00:04:24,222 --> 00:04:26,974 ‐That would be great. ‐Yeah. 99 00:04:26,975 --> 00:04:28,934 The Oak Island swamp? 100 00:04:28,935 --> 00:04:32,438 Just 300 to 400 years old? 101 00:04:32,439 --> 00:04:35,775 Could the team have finally found scientific proof 102 00:04:35,776 --> 00:04:38,861 that the swamp is man‐made? 103 00:04:38,862 --> 00:04:40,571 It's pretty intriguing 104 00:04:40,572 --> 00:04:43,908 that Dr. Spooner's observations are that 105 00:04:43,909 --> 00:04:45,618 the swamp here on Oak Island is actually 106 00:04:45,619 --> 00:04:47,161 quite a bit younger than he thought, 107 00:04:47,162 --> 00:04:49,288 maybe 300 to 400 years old. 108 00:04:49,289 --> 00:04:50,873 Right around the time frame 109 00:04:50,874 --> 00:04:53,209 when the swamp may have been manipulated 110 00:04:53,210 --> 00:04:55,961 for some purpose associated with perhaps 111 00:04:55,962 --> 00:04:58,547 original depositional work in the Money Pit. 112 00:04:58,548 --> 00:05:01,801 Nothing you've found yet is inconsistent 113 00:05:01,802 --> 00:05:03,636 with this thing being created, 114 00:05:03,637 --> 00:05:06,555 say, between zero to 500 years ago, right? 115 00:05:06,556 --> 00:05:07,973 That's true. 116 00:05:07,974 --> 00:05:10,726 I'm sure in your career you've looked 117 00:05:10,727 --> 00:05:12,394 at lots of things like this. 118 00:05:12,395 --> 00:05:13,979 Is this an oddity? 119 00:05:13,980 --> 00:05:15,689 Yeah. It is a bit. 120 00:05:15,690 --> 00:05:17,900 It's kind of fascinating to me because it's, um... 121 00:05:17,901 --> 00:05:19,443 it's just not what I expected. 122 00:05:19,444 --> 00:05:21,529 And so, 123 00:05:21,530 --> 00:05:23,989 the thing that I've seen here is it's much different. 124 00:05:23,990 --> 00:05:25,825 It‐it's more complex. 125 00:05:25,826 --> 00:05:28,828 And I think that some of that has to do with the geology, 126 00:05:28,829 --> 00:05:32,498 or it's something that people manipulated. 127 00:05:32,499 --> 00:05:34,667 ‐Absolutely. ‐And so, 128 00:05:34,668 --> 00:05:36,669 if we went back 300 years, 129 00:05:36,670 --> 00:05:39,672 I just don't think you'd have this triangular feature, 130 00:05:39,673 --> 00:05:43,175 and that might have been just terrestrial vegetation. 131 00:05:43,176 --> 00:05:46,595 So there's no chance this could have been two islands? 132 00:05:46,596 --> 00:05:49,431 Uh, at one point, I think it might have been 133 00:05:49,432 --> 00:05:52,935 at least two drumlins. 134 00:05:52,936 --> 00:05:54,395 Yep. 135 00:05:54,396 --> 00:05:56,355 But what intrigues me about it, 136 00:05:56,356 --> 00:05:59,108 what got me excited was, at the top of the triangle, 137 00:05:59,109 --> 00:06:01,986 we saw that oval feature. 138 00:06:01,987 --> 00:06:05,197 In addition to the core samples collected 139 00:06:05,198 --> 00:06:08,367 in the swamp just one week ago, 140 00:06:08,368 --> 00:06:11,996 Dr. Spooner and members of his team 141 00:06:11,997 --> 00:06:14,707 recently returned to extract additional samples, 142 00:06:14,708 --> 00:06:17,711 as well as probing the swamp's muddy bottom. 143 00:06:19,212 --> 00:06:21,881 We were probing around that circle, 144 00:06:21,882 --> 00:06:26,011 and we started hitting rock on the perimeter of that feature. 145 00:06:27,721 --> 00:06:30,807 ‐So it's like a circle of stones? ‐Yeah. 146 00:06:32,309 --> 00:06:34,059 It's an interesting scientific problem 147 00:06:34,060 --> 00:06:35,811 because a circular feature like that 148 00:06:35,812 --> 00:06:38,397 in this kind of environment is not something we'd expect. 149 00:06:38,398 --> 00:06:41,817 And it's defined by vegetation. 150 00:06:41,818 --> 00:06:43,986 So something's going on here. 151 00:06:43,987 --> 00:06:46,655 Something's stopping vegetation from growing? 152 00:06:46,656 --> 00:06:48,408 In‐in there. Right. Exactly. 153 00:06:49,910 --> 00:06:51,619 If there's this rock feature 154 00:06:51,620 --> 00:06:54,413 in association with that water area 155 00:06:54,414 --> 00:06:56,123 that has not changed whatsoever. 156 00:06:56,124 --> 00:06:57,791 The swamp has changed, 157 00:06:57,792 --> 00:07:00,419 but that feature has not. 158 00:07:00,420 --> 00:07:02,630 It's probably associated 159 00:07:02,631 --> 00:07:04,840 with some sort of human intervention. 160 00:07:04,841 --> 00:07:07,926 Okay. Well, I‐I think this is great data. 161 00:07:07,927 --> 00:07:10,179 Very interesting. I'd like to see your, 162 00:07:10,180 --> 00:07:13,307 you know, as you continue, uh, please stay in touch. 163 00:07:13,308 --> 00:07:15,517 And, you know, Rick, we don't have any problem 164 00:07:15,518 --> 00:07:17,186 with him having full access, right? 165 00:07:17,187 --> 00:07:19,480 ‐Absolutely not. Yep. ‐No issue there. 166 00:07:19,481 --> 00:07:22,608 Anyway, good. So this is good, this has been a great session. 167 00:07:22,609 --> 00:07:24,777 ‐Let's go back and get at it. ‐All right. See ya. 168 00:07:24,778 --> 00:07:27,572 ‐See you. ‐See you guys later. 169 00:07:33,578 --> 00:07:35,663 The following day... 170 00:07:35,664 --> 00:07:37,122 Here we are, guys. 171 00:07:37,123 --> 00:07:39,041 ‐The swamp. ‐ Marty Lagina 172 00:07:39,042 --> 00:07:41,960 has arrived on the island to join his son Alex, 173 00:07:41,961 --> 00:07:45,339 along with metal detection expert Gary Drayton 174 00:07:45,340 --> 00:07:48,467 and surveyor Steve Guptill, at the swamp. 175 00:07:48,468 --> 00:07:52,054 They are eager to follow up on Dr. Spooner's report 176 00:07:52,055 --> 00:07:54,014 of a mysterious rock formation 177 00:07:54,015 --> 00:07:56,684 that lies beneath the swamp's northern point, 178 00:07:56,685 --> 00:08:00,521 an area also referred to as "the pond." 179 00:08:00,522 --> 00:08:03,732 The objective is to delineate this structure. 180 00:08:03,733 --> 00:08:05,818 ‐Yeah. ‐We need to find out what it is, 181 00:08:05,819 --> 00:08:08,070 and we're trying to see if it's man‐made. 182 00:08:08,071 --> 00:08:10,072 ‐Right. ‐If it's got answers, I want to know 183 00:08:10,073 --> 00:08:12,408 ‐what they are, so let's get going. ‐I'm gonna hand you that one 184 00:08:12,409 --> 00:08:14,576 ‐so you get the oars in there, and I'm gonna get ready. ‐Sure. Yep. 185 00:08:14,577 --> 00:08:16,161 I'm gonna get the probing rods. 186 00:08:16,162 --> 00:08:17,830 Let's put this in the boat. 187 00:08:17,831 --> 00:08:20,165 I find the most significant thing 188 00:08:20,166 --> 00:08:22,292 about Dr. Spooner's observation 189 00:08:22,293 --> 00:08:26,255 that the pond area, which is sort of at the top 190 00:08:26,256 --> 00:08:27,881 of the triangle of the swamp, 191 00:08:27,882 --> 00:08:30,592 by kind of probing around the edges of it, 192 00:08:30,593 --> 00:08:33,346 he thinks there might be a rock wall encompassing it. 193 00:08:34,222 --> 00:08:35,597 There you go. 194 00:08:35,598 --> 00:08:37,142 Go ahead and get in. 195 00:08:39,144 --> 00:08:40,519 Avast! 196 00:08:40,520 --> 00:08:42,104 Here we go. 197 00:08:42,105 --> 00:08:44,440 See that little clump right in the center there? 198 00:08:44,441 --> 00:08:46,608 ‐That island of bottom debris? ‐ Yep. 199 00:08:46,609 --> 00:08:49,862 ‐Let's stay to the west of that. ‐Got it. 200 00:08:49,863 --> 00:08:52,573 Gary has volunteered to actually go in the swamp. 201 00:08:52,574 --> 00:08:55,534 Steve has the high‐tech equipment 202 00:08:55,535 --> 00:08:58,662 to map what Gary finds, and we got just the right crew. 203 00:08:58,663 --> 00:09:00,873 We're gonna go out and figure this thing out. 204 00:09:00,874 --> 00:09:04,585 Guys, we're in the eye of the storm now. 205 00:09:04,586 --> 00:09:06,712 Careful, Gary. It gets deep. 206 00:09:06,713 --> 00:09:08,797 Whoo! 207 00:09:08,798 --> 00:09:10,215 There you go. 208 00:09:10,216 --> 00:09:11,967 ‐On the rock. ‐Yep. 209 00:09:11,968 --> 00:09:13,052 Nice and cold. 210 00:09:13,053 --> 00:09:14,428 That's straight on the rock. 211 00:09:14,429 --> 00:09:16,972 I can actually feel it under my feet. 212 00:09:16,973 --> 00:09:17,973 How does it feel? 213 00:09:17,974 --> 00:09:19,725 ‐Flat? Smooth? ‐Um... 214 00:09:19,726 --> 00:09:22,394 Is that a rock, or is that metal? 215 00:09:22,395 --> 00:09:24,189 Put my pinpointer in. 216 00:09:29,986 --> 00:09:31,612 ‐Ooh! ‐Did you get metal? 217 00:09:31,613 --> 00:09:33,073 Yeah, there's metal down here. 218 00:09:35,033 --> 00:09:36,408 Really? 219 00:09:36,409 --> 00:09:37,993 While investigating 220 00:09:37,994 --> 00:09:40,120 a mysterious oval‐shaped rock formation 221 00:09:40,121 --> 00:09:42,748 at the northern point of the Oak Island swamp, 222 00:09:42,749 --> 00:09:45,709 metal detection expert Gary Drayton 223 00:09:45,710 --> 00:09:49,379 has just located what could be an important find 224 00:09:49,380 --> 00:09:53,008 some six feet deep below the surface. 225 00:09:53,009 --> 00:09:55,219 Yeah, strong vibration just here. 226 00:09:55,220 --> 00:09:56,762 Just there or everywhere? 227 00:09:56,763 --> 00:09:59,723 In this area, it's going... it's going nuts. 228 00:09:59,724 --> 00:10:01,809 I mean, is it maybe just malfunctioning, but... 229 00:10:01,810 --> 00:10:05,354 No. Because when I've got it here, there's no vibration. 230 00:10:05,355 --> 00:10:06,605 You go... There we go. 231 00:10:06,606 --> 00:10:07,856 ‐I've started getting it. ‐Hmm. 232 00:10:07,857 --> 00:10:09,316 Once you get down there, 233 00:10:09,317 --> 00:10:11,235 there's definitely metal here, and it's iron. 234 00:10:11,236 --> 00:10:12,611 Hmm. 235 00:10:12,612 --> 00:10:15,155 'Cause I'm getting that short, rapid vibration. 236 00:10:15,156 --> 00:10:17,032 Iron? 237 00:10:17,033 --> 00:10:20,160 Found throughout the oval‐shaped stone formation? 238 00:10:20,161 --> 00:10:22,955 But, if so, who put it here? 239 00:10:22,956 --> 00:10:25,457 And what is its purpose? 240 00:10:25,458 --> 00:10:27,167 You know what, Gary? Why don't you come up here, 241 00:10:27,168 --> 00:10:28,293 because this is a lot shallower, 242 00:10:28,294 --> 00:10:30,254 and maybe you can pinpoint again, 243 00:10:30,255 --> 00:10:32,422 see if there's metal all the way around this puppy. 244 00:10:32,423 --> 00:10:34,591 Everywhere else on the island, 245 00:10:34,592 --> 00:10:36,468 people have been looking for treasure for 200 years, 246 00:10:36,469 --> 00:10:39,138 and everything has been torn up, and it's hard to rely 247 00:10:39,139 --> 00:10:42,182 on the context of anything, and everything's been observed. 248 00:10:42,183 --> 00:10:43,892 But in the swamp, if we find a... 249 00:10:43,893 --> 00:10:46,311 a man‐made structure or otherwise, 250 00:10:46,312 --> 00:10:48,647 we can be pretty sure 251 00:10:48,648 --> 00:10:50,858 that we're the first people to actually find it. 252 00:10:50,859 --> 00:10:53,569 So we have the potential to get a lot of answers 253 00:10:53,570 --> 00:10:55,195 from what we find here 254 00:10:55,196 --> 00:10:57,574 that we wouldn't get anywhere else on the island. 255 00:11:01,202 --> 00:11:03,245 Well, you know what? Then while you're there... 256 00:11:03,246 --> 00:11:05,080 Give him that probe. 257 00:11:05,081 --> 00:11:08,750 I hate to be demanding, but... we're out here for data. 258 00:11:08,751 --> 00:11:10,794 Here we go. 259 00:11:12,380 --> 00:11:14,590 ‐ That's solid. ‐Yeah, that's a good one. 260 00:11:14,591 --> 00:11:16,508 Why don't you try your metal detector again, 261 00:11:16,509 --> 00:11:18,552 ‐if you can reach down. ‐That is a great idea. 262 00:11:18,553 --> 00:11:20,179 Let's see. 263 00:11:20,180 --> 00:11:21,347 Pinpointer on. 264 00:11:23,683 --> 00:11:25,767 Ooh. Yeah. 265 00:11:25,768 --> 00:11:28,979 ‐You getting more metal? ‐Yeah, getting more metal. 266 00:11:28,980 --> 00:11:30,856 ‐Yeah. ‐ As Gary continues metal detecting... 267 00:11:30,857 --> 00:11:32,941 All right, I'm gonna come shoot that, Marty. 268 00:11:32,942 --> 00:11:35,819 ...surveyor Steve Guptill uses his GPS receiver 269 00:11:35,820 --> 00:11:37,863 to plot the dimensions and coordinates 270 00:11:37,864 --> 00:11:41,283 of the mysterious stone‐and‐iron formation. 271 00:11:41,284 --> 00:11:43,702 Got it. Thanks, Gary. 272 00:11:43,703 --> 00:11:45,704 Are you sure these aren't false? 273 00:11:45,705 --> 00:11:47,372 Try and find a place where you aren't getting metal. 274 00:11:47,373 --> 00:11:49,042 ‐ Yeah, that's what I'm doing now. ‐Yeah. 275 00:11:50,084 --> 00:11:52,252 Not getting any signals here. 276 00:11:52,253 --> 00:11:53,587 Hmm. 277 00:11:53,588 --> 00:11:55,839 So it's always around the rocks. 278 00:11:55,840 --> 00:11:57,466 ‐ Yeah. ‐Yeah, seems to be. 279 00:11:57,467 --> 00:11:58,592 Odd. 280 00:11:58,593 --> 00:12:00,594 What becomes apparent to me 281 00:12:00,595 --> 00:12:01,762 pretty quickly is two things. 282 00:12:01,763 --> 00:12:03,513 Okay, head out this way, Gary. 283 00:12:03,514 --> 00:12:05,599 One, yes, there are a lot of rocks around there, 284 00:12:05,600 --> 00:12:07,100 and we can't really determine 285 00:12:07,101 --> 00:12:09,019 if there's a shape to these stones. 286 00:12:09,020 --> 00:12:12,147 But there's enough there that I'm keenly interested, 287 00:12:12,148 --> 00:12:14,733 and he keeps getting hits all over the place. 288 00:12:14,734 --> 00:12:17,569 Ooh‐hoo, that's a clank! 289 00:12:17,570 --> 00:12:18,820 I can feel this one. 290 00:12:18,821 --> 00:12:21,240 This is the biggest one so far. 291 00:12:21,241 --> 00:12:23,076 Get the center of it, Gary, please. 292 00:12:25,578 --> 00:12:28,247 It seems to have a flat edge on this side. 293 00:12:28,248 --> 00:12:29,623 ‐Really? ‐Slopes down. 294 00:12:29,624 --> 00:12:31,166 Flat edge. 295 00:12:31,167 --> 00:12:32,668 Rounded. 296 00:12:32,669 --> 00:12:35,420 All of the Nolan's Cross boulders have a flat edge. 297 00:12:35,421 --> 00:12:37,798 ‐Yeah, this is impressive. ‐ Well... 298 00:12:37,799 --> 00:12:39,758 we'll go back and put it on the map, 299 00:12:39,759 --> 00:12:42,928 see whether it might fit into something. 300 00:12:42,929 --> 00:12:45,973 This is a very puzzling feature here, this Eye of the Swamp. 301 00:12:45,974 --> 00:12:47,767 The all‐seeing eye. 302 00:12:49,018 --> 00:12:51,144 "The Eye of the Swamp"? 303 00:12:51,145 --> 00:12:54,147 Could Marty Lagina have just identified a link 304 00:12:54,148 --> 00:12:55,774 between the mysterious anomaly 305 00:12:55,775 --> 00:12:58,610 at the apex of the triangle‐shaped swamp 306 00:12:58,611 --> 00:13:02,364 and the ancient symbol of "the all‐seeing eye"? 307 00:13:02,365 --> 00:13:05,951 Also known as the Eye of Providence, 308 00:13:05,952 --> 00:13:07,744 the symbol of an eye 309 00:13:07,745 --> 00:13:10,622 as representative of a divine power dates back 310 00:13:10,623 --> 00:13:13,458 to the days of the Egyptian pharaohs. 311 00:13:13,459 --> 00:13:15,961 Later coupled with the image of a pyramid, 312 00:13:15,962 --> 00:13:18,672 the symbol was adopted by both the Knights Templar 313 00:13:18,673 --> 00:13:20,674 and later by the Freemasons. 314 00:13:20,675 --> 00:13:24,136 It was this same image that was added to the design 315 00:13:24,137 --> 00:13:28,724 of the one‐dollar bill in 1935 by none other 316 00:13:28,725 --> 00:13:31,768 than U. S. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, 317 00:13:31,769 --> 00:13:34,813 who was not only a Freemason, but also spent time 318 00:13:34,814 --> 00:13:39,319 as a young man searching for the treasure on Oak Island. 319 00:13:43,573 --> 00:13:46,241 We got a slip down the side of it there. 320 00:13:46,242 --> 00:13:48,577 I can feel it on my feet. 321 00:13:48,578 --> 00:13:50,495 It's kind of like a dome shape. 322 00:13:50,496 --> 00:13:52,789 It's definitely... it's got, like, a peak on it. 323 00:13:52,790 --> 00:13:55,542 Like a cone. It goes up to a cone. 324 00:13:55,543 --> 00:13:57,878 ‐You want to run your metal detector on it? ‐Yeah. 325 00:13:57,879 --> 00:14:00,505 I'll run it over the top of the stone. 326 00:14:03,384 --> 00:14:06,845 No, no metal, but this is so... 327 00:14:06,846 --> 00:14:08,638 so much different to the other stones. 328 00:14:08,639 --> 00:14:10,599 This is really, really impressive. 329 00:14:10,600 --> 00:14:12,934 This is a large stone. 330 00:14:12,935 --> 00:14:15,562 Yeah. Fred Nolan thought those sorts of rocks were markers. 331 00:14:15,563 --> 00:14:17,939 That's what it looks like, some stone marker. 332 00:14:17,940 --> 00:14:20,650 We for sure need to see what the stones are 333 00:14:20,651 --> 00:14:22,694 and see what the heck it's all about. 334 00:14:22,695 --> 00:14:26,031 There's enough interesting, anomalous stuff. 335 00:14:26,032 --> 00:14:28,867 I want to see it. I want to know what it is. 336 00:14:28,868 --> 00:14:30,869 We need to drain this puppy. 337 00:14:30,870 --> 00:14:32,954 This is... this is already mysterious enough. 338 00:14:32,955 --> 00:14:34,372 Yeah. 339 00:14:34,373 --> 00:14:36,541 Let's drain it. If we drain it, we might be able 340 00:14:36,542 --> 00:14:38,418 to figure out what's setting off your metal detector. 341 00:14:38,419 --> 00:14:39,836 ‐Yep. ‐ All right, good job. 342 00:14:39,837 --> 00:14:41,963 Get back in the boat. Let's get out of here. 343 00:14:45,301 --> 00:14:48,929 Following their investigation at the swamp, 344 00:14:48,930 --> 00:14:51,389 Marty, Alex, Gary and Steve 345 00:14:51,390 --> 00:14:53,433 head to the war room to report their findings 346 00:14:53,434 --> 00:14:55,644 to Rick Lagina and other members 347 00:14:55,645 --> 00:14:57,479 of the Oak Island team. 348 00:14:57,480 --> 00:15:00,148 Gentlemen, I think my job here today is to report, 349 00:15:00,149 --> 00:15:03,068 because we had an expedition to the eye, 350 00:15:03,069 --> 00:15:05,112 the Eye of the Swamp. 351 00:15:05,113 --> 00:15:07,531 And Gary came along because... 352 00:15:07,532 --> 00:15:10,242 I was keenly interested in metal detecting. 353 00:15:10,243 --> 00:15:14,538 Gary got in that nasty, rotten, stinky water, 354 00:15:14,539 --> 00:15:16,957 basically up to his neck at times. 355 00:15:16,958 --> 00:15:19,459 ‐It was great. 356 00:15:19,460 --> 00:15:21,628 Several times, 357 00:15:21,629 --> 00:15:23,463 Gary reached down with his pinpointer, 358 00:15:23,464 --> 00:15:25,340 several times, in several different locations, 359 00:15:25,341 --> 00:15:27,260 and got hits. 360 00:15:28,136 --> 00:15:29,427 Yeah, I was getting 361 00:15:29,428 --> 00:15:31,596 good iron hits with a pinpointer, 362 00:15:31,597 --> 00:15:35,684 and it was vibrating every time I got close to a rock. 363 00:15:35,685 --> 00:15:37,435 And it was too big of an area 364 00:15:37,436 --> 00:15:39,187 ‐just to be one marker's halo. ‐ Yeah. 365 00:15:39,188 --> 00:15:41,481 I mean, that was all the way around the eye. 366 00:15:41,482 --> 00:15:43,567 ‐It certainly is interesting. ‐ Anyway, 367 00:15:43,568 --> 00:15:46,194 ‐go ahead, Steve, take it away. ‐Okay, so you'll see 368 00:15:46,195 --> 00:15:47,612 on the west side... 369 00:15:47,613 --> 00:15:50,365 a decently defined ring of rocks. 370 00:15:50,366 --> 00:15:53,201 And, now, most of that work is from... 371 00:15:53,202 --> 00:15:54,494 Dr. Ian Spooner. 372 00:15:54,495 --> 00:15:57,581 What we did was this. 373 00:15:57,582 --> 00:16:00,667 Every mark you see here is a Gary find. 374 00:16:00,668 --> 00:16:02,627 The red is the only rock 375 00:16:02,628 --> 00:16:05,463 that Gary didn't get a ring of iron on. 376 00:16:05,464 --> 00:16:07,883 Yeah, because Gary kept describing that one as conical, 377 00:16:07,884 --> 00:16:10,468 massive, with a flat side 378 00:16:10,469 --> 00:16:12,012 ‐on one side, which is... ‐ Yeah. 379 00:16:12,013 --> 00:16:14,556 ...kind of like all the Nolan's Cross rocks. 380 00:16:14,557 --> 00:16:15,807 It's a pointer. 381 00:16:15,808 --> 00:16:17,142 We just haven't figured out how. 382 00:16:17,143 --> 00:16:18,643 It's the eye. 383 00:16:18,644 --> 00:16:20,520 That feature has been 384 00:16:20,521 --> 00:16:22,355 a puzzle to all of us. 385 00:16:22,356 --> 00:16:24,608 You can go back to the 1920s 386 00:16:24,609 --> 00:16:26,193 and look at old aerials, 387 00:16:26,194 --> 00:16:28,570 and that feature has not changed at all. 388 00:16:28,571 --> 00:16:30,739 Vegetation has not crept in. 389 00:16:30,740 --> 00:16:32,866 The Eye of the Swamp, if you will, 390 00:16:32,867 --> 00:16:34,743 has stayed the same, and... 391 00:16:34,744 --> 00:16:36,995 There may be some sort of rock feature 392 00:16:36,996 --> 00:16:38,705 in association with it. 393 00:16:38,706 --> 00:16:41,374 And we believe this has indeed been developed 394 00:16:41,375 --> 00:16:43,335 at the hand of man. 395 00:16:43,336 --> 00:16:47,297 We were intrigued enough, uh, and of one mind 396 00:16:47,298 --> 00:16:50,425 that we need to drain the swamp, bottom line. 397 00:16:50,426 --> 00:16:52,260 And we know, Rick, we know from your experience, 398 00:16:52,261 --> 00:16:54,012 it's gonna be difficult to drain it. 399 00:16:54,013 --> 00:16:56,431 ‐Yeah. ‐But even if we could get it down to a foot, 400 00:16:56,432 --> 00:16:58,183 you'd see a lot of these rocks. 401 00:16:58,184 --> 00:17:01,520 We have a draining permit. We don't have a dig permit. 402 00:17:03,189 --> 00:17:05,398 Although Rick and Marty are eager 403 00:17:05,399 --> 00:17:07,150 to continue their investigation 404 00:17:07,151 --> 00:17:10,403 of the mysterious rock structure in the swamp, 405 00:17:10,404 --> 00:17:12,948 Canadian provincial law requires they obtain 406 00:17:12,949 --> 00:17:14,950 two separate government permits 407 00:17:14,951 --> 00:17:19,246 before they can begin to drain and excavate the area. 408 00:17:19,247 --> 00:17:22,040 This is really... brand‐new. 409 00:17:22,041 --> 00:17:24,376 I mean, we've never attempted to drain, 410 00:17:24,377 --> 00:17:26,503 certainly, that back area, 411 00:17:26,504 --> 00:17:27,921 and, uh, 412 00:17:27,922 --> 00:17:29,506 I don't know if it's gonna work. 413 00:17:29,507 --> 00:17:30,924 We need to figure out 414 00:17:30,925 --> 00:17:32,300 how we could excavate the swamp, 415 00:17:32,301 --> 00:17:34,261 how we could hold back... 416 00:17:34,262 --> 00:17:36,721 all of that fetid... 417 00:17:36,722 --> 00:17:38,473 junk. 418 00:17:38,474 --> 00:17:40,559 That concludes our report. 419 00:17:40,560 --> 00:17:42,018 Everybody concurs, right? We need to drain it. 420 00:17:42,019 --> 00:17:43,144 ‐Absolutely. Yeah. ‐Absolutely. 421 00:17:43,145 --> 00:17:45,731 So let's go make it all so. 422 00:17:50,736 --> 00:17:52,696 One day after the team's decision 423 00:17:52,697 --> 00:17:54,114 to conduct a large‐scale dig operation 424 00:17:54,115 --> 00:17:56,408 in the Oak Island swamp, 425 00:17:56,409 --> 00:18:00,412 Rick Lagina, his nephew Alex, and other members of the team 426 00:18:00,413 --> 00:18:04,833 meet with Shawn Wilson of Wilson Excavation, Ltd. 427 00:18:04,834 --> 00:18:06,668 ‐How are you, Rick? ‐Good, good. 428 00:18:06,669 --> 00:18:09,879 So, we've got a bit of a... problem. 429 00:18:09,880 --> 00:18:13,425 We've got the swamp, we've got potential targets in the swamp. 430 00:18:13,426 --> 00:18:15,760 ‐Right. ‐And‐and it's extensive, and it's deep. 431 00:18:15,761 --> 00:18:18,513 ‐Well, should we go down and have a look and...? ‐Yep. Absolutely. 432 00:18:18,514 --> 00:18:21,308 Now that the team has decided to conduct 433 00:18:21,309 --> 00:18:23,977 a large‐scale excavation in the swamp, 434 00:18:23,978 --> 00:18:26,313 they have scheduled on‐site meetings 435 00:18:26,314 --> 00:18:29,774 with contractors who specialize in projects that involve 436 00:18:29,775 --> 00:18:33,987 similar logistical and engineering challenges. 437 00:18:33,988 --> 00:18:37,115 As far as I'm concerned, I think the... 438 00:18:37,116 --> 00:18:39,075 the process, the digging, 439 00:18:39,076 --> 00:18:42,287 the exposing of the swamp is really gonna tell the tale. 440 00:18:42,288 --> 00:18:46,416 And I think the first step is to give it to experts 441 00:18:46,417 --> 00:18:50,880 and let them render an opinion on how we dry up the muck. 442 00:18:51,797 --> 00:18:53,923 So, this is, uh... 443 00:18:53,924 --> 00:18:56,134 our little pet project. 444 00:18:56,135 --> 00:19:00,013 We've got a water‐filled swamp, a bog. 445 00:19:00,014 --> 00:19:01,806 But we want to dig in this bog, 446 00:19:01,807 --> 00:19:04,893 and we're looking for ideas, options, 447 00:19:04,894 --> 00:19:06,978 in order to accomplish that task. 448 00:19:06,979 --> 00:19:09,147 ‐Right. ‐Okay, so here's the thing. 449 00:19:09,148 --> 00:19:11,524 Within those orange flag stakes... 450 00:19:11,525 --> 00:19:13,193 Yeah. 451 00:19:13,194 --> 00:19:15,779 This is a targeted area, and... 452 00:19:15,780 --> 00:19:18,948 the area over here, this would probably be 453 00:19:18,949 --> 00:19:22,160 more of a dig, because we don't have a complete understanding 454 00:19:22,161 --> 00:19:23,578 of the target area. 455 00:19:23,579 --> 00:19:26,956 And over here, it would be more... 456 00:19:26,957 --> 00:19:30,126 "dig to search" rather than "dig to actually find." 457 00:19:30,127 --> 00:19:32,045 ‐Right. ‐Scott, if you want to show him 458 00:19:32,046 --> 00:19:33,672 ‐the area of interest? ‐Yeah. 459 00:19:33,673 --> 00:19:36,466 Although the team's ultimate goal 460 00:19:36,467 --> 00:19:39,678 is to explore the swamp in its entirety, 461 00:19:39,679 --> 00:19:42,347 they've decided, for now, to focus their search 462 00:19:42,348 --> 00:19:44,349 in three target areas. 463 00:19:44,350 --> 00:19:47,727 First, the place where seismic scanning identified 464 00:19:47,728 --> 00:19:50,188 a massive 200‐foot‐long object 465 00:19:50,189 --> 00:19:53,191 resembling a ship or galleon. 466 00:19:53,192 --> 00:19:56,903 Then the mysterious stone wharf, or roadway, 467 00:19:56,904 --> 00:20:01,116 discovered by diver Tony Sampson two weeks ago. 468 00:20:01,117 --> 00:20:05,537 And finally, the area recently identified by Dr. Ian Spooner, 469 00:20:05,538 --> 00:20:08,040 the Eye of the Swamp. 470 00:20:09,583 --> 00:20:12,043 So, it's three separate issues. 471 00:20:12,044 --> 00:20:14,379 So I like the idea of isolating the dig areas. 472 00:20:14,380 --> 00:20:16,965 ‐Right. Yeah. ‐But what do you do with the material? 473 00:20:16,966 --> 00:20:18,591 Uh, once the swamp's drained down, 474 00:20:18,592 --> 00:20:20,885 we need to find out if we have a hard enough bottom 475 00:20:20,886 --> 00:20:22,762 to be able to put some rig mats out there, 476 00:20:22,763 --> 00:20:24,889 so we can get a machine out into the swamp 477 00:20:24,890 --> 00:20:27,100 and basically make a square with trench cages. 478 00:20:27,101 --> 00:20:30,270 And that's gonna seal off all that slump of peat 479 00:20:30,271 --> 00:20:32,605 that wants to slump back in the hole that we're in. 480 00:20:32,606 --> 00:20:35,316 ‐You're basically creating a dig box. ‐A dig box, yeah. 481 00:20:35,317 --> 00:20:38,236 A dig box, or trench cage, 482 00:20:38,237 --> 00:20:40,739 is a structure created by placing four barriers 483 00:20:40,740 --> 00:20:43,283 made of aluminum or steel in such a way 484 00:20:43,284 --> 00:20:47,078 as to isolate a desired dig area. 485 00:20:47,079 --> 00:20:50,749 In addition to preventing cave‐ins caused by loose soils 486 00:20:50,750 --> 00:20:54,419 and groundwater, dig boxes also provide a way 487 00:20:54,420 --> 00:20:56,963 to store the excavated earth and materials, 488 00:20:56,964 --> 00:20:58,631 known as spoils, 489 00:20:58,632 --> 00:21:01,134 so that they can later be searched by hand 490 00:21:01,135 --> 00:21:04,512 and metal‐detected for important clues. 491 00:21:04,513 --> 00:21:08,308 How big are these so‐called trench cages? 492 00:21:08,309 --> 00:21:10,935 So, we'd probably want to stay with some 16‐foot cages. 493 00:21:10,936 --> 00:21:13,271 You'd want the cage to weigh at least two, three tons. 494 00:21:13,272 --> 00:21:15,148 Something that's still gonna be enough weight that it's 495 00:21:15,149 --> 00:21:17,484 just gonna sink down through that peat to hard bottom 496 00:21:17,485 --> 00:21:19,444 but still hold all the peat back. 497 00:21:19,445 --> 00:21:21,446 ‐I see. And how tall are they? 498 00:21:21,447 --> 00:21:24,741 Uh, they range between four feet high and 16 feet high. 499 00:21:24,742 --> 00:21:27,994 ‐Can you stack 'em on top of each other? ‐And you can stack 'em, yeah. 500 00:21:27,995 --> 00:21:30,789 ‐And get 20 feet out of 'em. ‐If you wanted to, yeah. 501 00:21:30,790 --> 00:21:32,832 You can just build the boxes of your trench cages right in 502 00:21:32,833 --> 00:21:34,459 ‐where you're working. ‐ That's what I think 503 00:21:34,460 --> 00:21:35,877 ‐makes the most sense. ‐Yeah. 504 00:21:35,878 --> 00:21:37,921 But we should probably actually run the numbers on it. 505 00:21:37,922 --> 00:21:39,589 ‐ Yeah. Yeah. ‐Absolutely. 506 00:21:39,590 --> 00:21:41,132 It sounds easy. 507 00:21:41,133 --> 00:21:43,593 Yeah, sounds... sounds good, doesn't it? 508 00:21:43,594 --> 00:21:45,345 Yeah. Yeah, now put it in action. 509 00:21:45,346 --> 00:21:46,638 ‐Yeah. ‐I think it's... 510 00:21:46,639 --> 00:21:48,973 simple on its face but very difficult 511 00:21:48,974 --> 00:21:51,643 when you start getting into the nitty‐gritty. 512 00:21:51,644 --> 00:21:53,645 Yeah. As everything is on Oak Island. 513 00:21:55,022 --> 00:21:57,315 I am not going to dispute that one iota. 514 00:21:57,316 --> 00:21:58,566 Me, either. 515 00:21:58,567 --> 00:22:00,401 The whole point of this 516 00:22:00,402 --> 00:22:03,488 is to get everyone's professional idea as to how 517 00:22:03,489 --> 00:22:06,658 we can do a proper investigation 518 00:22:06,659 --> 00:22:07,826 in the swamp. 519 00:22:07,827 --> 00:22:10,703 And given Shawn's experience 520 00:22:10,704 --> 00:22:13,122 in wetland environments, 521 00:22:13,123 --> 00:22:16,501 the hope is that he can help us with that endeavor. 522 00:22:16,502 --> 00:22:19,170 ‐Shawn, appreciate your time. ‐Yep. No problem. 523 00:22:19,171 --> 00:22:21,507 We'll be in touch. 524 00:22:25,678 --> 00:22:27,720 Later that afternoon, 525 00:22:27,721 --> 00:22:32,058 Alex Lagina, along with his cousin Peter Fornetti 526 00:22:32,059 --> 00:22:34,227 and island historian Charles Barkhouse, 527 00:22:34,228 --> 00:22:37,897 travel to Saint Mary's University in Halifax. 528 00:22:37,898 --> 00:22:41,025 They are eager to have the two metal swages 529 00:22:41,026 --> 00:22:43,528 recently discovered by Gary Drayton... 530 00:22:43,529 --> 00:22:47,156 and identified by blacksmithing expert Carmen Legge 531 00:22:47,157 --> 00:22:49,576 scientifically examined. 532 00:22:49,577 --> 00:22:52,537 This is probably gonna be the first swage that... 533 00:22:52,538 --> 00:22:55,874 Dr. Christa Brosseau has ever seen, right? 534 00:22:55,875 --> 00:22:57,876 It‐it's quite possible, Alex. 535 00:22:57,877 --> 00:22:59,586 Although we're trying to tell the story 536 00:22:59,587 --> 00:23:00,920 of everything that happened here 537 00:23:00,921 --> 00:23:02,380 as part of our efforts, 538 00:23:02,381 --> 00:23:04,507 what we're really looking for is evidence 539 00:23:04,508 --> 00:23:07,051 of the original story, that there is treasure here. 540 00:23:07,052 --> 00:23:09,596 So it's possible that we have an everyday swage here, 541 00:23:09,597 --> 00:23:11,806 but it's also possible that we have evidence 542 00:23:11,807 --> 00:23:13,558 in the form of the swage 543 00:23:13,559 --> 00:23:15,435 that there are tunnels under the island. 544 00:23:15,436 --> 00:23:17,478 ‐I wonder how old they are. ‐If we could get 545 00:23:17,479 --> 00:23:21,149 a date on‐on these objects, maybe that may, 546 00:23:21,150 --> 00:23:24,193 you know, lock in, you know, some of the theories. 547 00:23:24,194 --> 00:23:26,237 ‐Or‐or one or two of the theories. ‐Yeah. 548 00:23:26,238 --> 00:23:28,323 Just narrowing things to a certain... 549 00:23:28,324 --> 00:23:30,409 ‐a certain time frame. ‐Right. 550 00:23:31,452 --> 00:23:32,953 We're here. 551 00:23:34,747 --> 00:23:36,581 Do you have the, uh...? 552 00:23:36,582 --> 00:23:38,124 ‐Got the artifacts. ‐Cool. 553 00:23:38,125 --> 00:23:39,918 Carmen Legge has suggested 554 00:23:39,919 --> 00:23:41,920 that these swages might be medieval, 555 00:23:41,921 --> 00:23:44,005 which puts them old enough to have been used 556 00:23:44,006 --> 00:23:45,798 in the original depositing of the treasure. 557 00:23:45,799 --> 00:23:47,342 So we're gonna show them to Dr. Christa Brosseau, 558 00:23:47,343 --> 00:23:49,802 and hopefully, she can date them for us. 559 00:23:49,803 --> 00:23:51,429 ‐Good to see you again. ‐Yeah. Nice to see you. 560 00:23:51,430 --> 00:23:52,847 ‐Charles. ‐Hi, Charles. 561 00:23:52,848 --> 00:23:54,432 ‐Peter. Nice to see you again. ‐You, too. 562 00:23:54,433 --> 00:23:57,644 I'm excited to see what you've brought me today. 563 00:23:57,645 --> 00:23:59,479 Dr. Christa Brosseau is 564 00:23:59,480 --> 00:24:01,898 an associate professor of chemistry 565 00:24:01,899 --> 00:24:03,816 and an expert in the study of metals 566 00:24:03,817 --> 00:24:06,611 and their chemical compositions. 567 00:24:06,612 --> 00:24:08,529 ‐Very heavy. ‐ Right. 568 00:24:08,530 --> 00:24:10,657 So, these are... uh, they're iron. 569 00:24:10,658 --> 00:24:12,325 We took them to a blacksmith 570 00:24:12,326 --> 00:24:14,118 uh, Carmen Legge, who's a blacksmith 571 00:24:14,119 --> 00:24:15,787 who identified these not as sledgehammers, actually, 572 00:24:15,788 --> 00:24:18,289 but as things used to sharpen rock chisels. 573 00:24:18,290 --> 00:24:21,918 And why we find it interesting is that a lot 574 00:24:21,919 --> 00:24:24,253 of the legends and a lot of the stories and theories 575 00:24:24,254 --> 00:24:27,507 involve a lot of tunneling through rock. 576 00:24:27,508 --> 00:24:29,175 So this is probably the first... 577 00:24:29,176 --> 00:24:31,302 ‐Right. ‐...hard evidence that that happened 578 00:24:31,303 --> 00:24:33,012 on Oak Island that we've found. 579 00:24:33,013 --> 00:24:35,181 ‐Exactly. ‐If it's old enough. 580 00:24:35,182 --> 00:24:38,309 ‐That's what we're hoping that you can help us with today. ‐Oh, okay. 581 00:24:38,310 --> 00:24:39,477 All right. 582 00:24:39,478 --> 00:24:41,562 ‐It's really quite dirty. ‐Mm‐hmm. 583 00:24:41,563 --> 00:24:43,648 But we'll do our best to... to clean them up 584 00:24:43,649 --> 00:24:45,067 ‐and get a sample today. ‐Okay. 585 00:24:54,284 --> 00:24:55,785 So, you can see as I clean it up, 586 00:24:55,786 --> 00:24:57,662 ‐the metal's... ‐Mm‐hmm. ‐Yeah. 587 00:24:57,663 --> 00:24:59,372 ...shining through, so that's what I want. 588 00:24:59,373 --> 00:25:01,833 I want just a little tiny piece of that shiny metal. 589 00:25:01,834 --> 00:25:03,292 ‐Mm‐hmm. ‐Because that'll be a nice... 590 00:25:03,293 --> 00:25:05,003 fresh surface to look at. 591 00:25:05,004 --> 00:25:08,339 And then I'll use my steel file to try and get a sample. 592 00:25:08,340 --> 00:25:12,010 Uh, cast iron can be tricky, 'cause it's so hard. 593 00:25:12,011 --> 00:25:14,430 So this may be, uh, difficult. 594 00:25:19,351 --> 00:25:20,893 Yeah, I think it looks good. 595 00:25:20,894 --> 00:25:24,188 And so we'll pack it up and... 596 00:25:24,189 --> 00:25:26,983 ‐take these downstairs. ‐Sounds good to me. 597 00:25:26,984 --> 00:25:28,568 ‐Hey, Xiang. ‐Hello. 598 00:25:28,569 --> 00:25:30,862 ‐How's it going today? ‐Good, good, and yourself? 599 00:25:30,863 --> 00:25:33,114 Good. Thanks for helping us with the samples. 600 00:25:33,115 --> 00:25:34,699 Oh. Yeah. 601 00:25:34,700 --> 00:25:36,367 ‐Hi, Xiang. I'm Alex. Remember me? 602 00:25:36,368 --> 00:25:37,869 ‐Yeah. ‐Peter. 603 00:25:37,870 --> 00:25:39,120 Working with her colleague, 604 00:25:39,121 --> 00:25:41,039 Dr. Xiang Yang, 605 00:25:41,040 --> 00:25:43,583 Dr. Brosseau will now perform a chemical analysis 606 00:25:43,584 --> 00:25:45,376 of the metal samples 607 00:25:45,377 --> 00:25:48,379 using a high‐powered scanning electron microscope, 608 00:25:48,380 --> 00:25:50,381 or SEM. 609 00:25:50,382 --> 00:25:52,592 Unlike traditional microscopes, 610 00:25:52,593 --> 00:25:55,219 which rely on a combination of light and lenses 611 00:25:55,220 --> 00:25:57,013 to magnify objects, 612 00:25:57,014 --> 00:25:59,098 the SEM performs scans 613 00:25:59,099 --> 00:26:01,768 with a focused beam of electrons, 614 00:26:01,769 --> 00:26:03,978 which can produce magnification 615 00:26:03,979 --> 00:26:06,397 as much as 200,000 times greater 616 00:26:06,398 --> 00:26:09,067 than an object's actual size. 617 00:26:09,068 --> 00:26:11,903 It can also provide a detailed analysis 618 00:26:11,904 --> 00:26:14,906 of the item's chemical composition. 619 00:26:14,907 --> 00:26:17,910 See the peaks for iron pop up there? 620 00:26:19,411 --> 00:26:22,789 And not much for oxygen, which is good. 621 00:26:22,790 --> 00:26:26,042 ‐And we do not see manganese here. ‐Um... no. 622 00:26:26,043 --> 00:26:28,628 In the objects we look at 623 00:26:28,629 --> 00:26:31,130 where there is manganese and they're... they are more modern, 624 00:26:31,131 --> 00:26:33,758 ‐it's very evident right away. ‐Right. 625 00:26:33,759 --> 00:26:35,259 ‐ So... ‐Yeah, so it's... 626 00:26:35,260 --> 00:26:36,803 Possibly very old. 627 00:26:36,804 --> 00:26:38,638 Yeah. It's hard to nail down a date, 628 00:26:38,639 --> 00:26:42,225 but I would say you're looking at a pre‐1840 date. 629 00:26:42,226 --> 00:26:43,477 Wow. 630 00:26:46,396 --> 00:26:48,147 At Saint Mary's University, 631 00:26:48,148 --> 00:26:50,817 located in Halifax, Nova Scotia, 632 00:26:50,818 --> 00:26:53,361 Dr. Christa Brosseau has just shared 633 00:26:53,362 --> 00:26:56,030 a potentially exciting scientific report 634 00:26:56,031 --> 00:26:57,490 with Alex Lagina, 635 00:26:57,491 --> 00:27:00,993 Charles Barkhouse and Peter Fornetti. 636 00:27:00,994 --> 00:27:03,204 By finding no traces of manganese 637 00:27:03,205 --> 00:27:06,040 in the iron swages found on Lot 21, 638 00:27:06,041 --> 00:27:08,668 blacksmithing expert Carmen Legge's assessment 639 00:27:08,669 --> 00:27:12,922 that the artifacts might date back as far as the 15th century 640 00:27:12,923 --> 00:27:15,383 could be correct. 641 00:27:15,384 --> 00:27:17,885 After all the tests and everything, 642 00:27:17,886 --> 00:27:20,930 we have an iron swage that has no manganese. 643 00:27:20,931 --> 00:27:24,016 So that means that it's definitely pre‐1840, 644 00:27:24,017 --> 00:27:27,061 and it's probably older than that. 645 00:27:27,062 --> 00:27:29,897 So we have a very exciting artifact here. 646 00:27:29,898 --> 00:27:32,149 Well, I think this is pretty exciting and meaningful, 647 00:27:32,150 --> 00:27:34,777 because there's nothing that rules out that these things are 648 00:27:34,778 --> 00:27:37,196 ‐as old as, uh, Carmen Legge suggested they might be. ‐Yes. 649 00:27:37,197 --> 00:27:39,156 ‐Yeah. ‐That's good news. 650 00:27:39,157 --> 00:27:40,449 ‐That's right. You know, this... 651 00:27:40,450 --> 00:27:42,243 if this is pre‐1840, 652 00:27:42,244 --> 00:27:44,579 then there's only two search groups 653 00:27:44,580 --> 00:27:47,832 that it would apply to, that we know of, 654 00:27:47,833 --> 00:27:52,003 and that would be the 1795 group of the three individuals, 655 00:27:52,004 --> 00:27:54,589 and then we have the 1803, 656 00:27:54,590 --> 00:27:56,090 you know, the Onslow Company. 657 00:27:56,091 --> 00:27:57,508 Other than that, uh, 658 00:27:57,509 --> 00:28:00,219 it's either a recovery operation or a... 659 00:28:00,220 --> 00:28:03,097 or a deposit operation that would predate those. 660 00:28:03,098 --> 00:28:05,892 Did either of those companies work... 661 00:28:05,893 --> 00:28:07,768 in that area that we found these? 662 00:28:07,769 --> 00:28:10,062 Uh... not that we know of, no. 663 00:28:10,063 --> 00:28:12,398 They were concentrated on the eastern end. 664 00:28:12,399 --> 00:28:14,150 So we know more 665 00:28:14,151 --> 00:28:15,860 than we knew when we arrived here today. 666 00:28:15,861 --> 00:28:17,737 We know they're pre‐1840s. 667 00:28:17,738 --> 00:28:19,780 ‐Mm‐hmm. ‐So I‐I think it's exciting. 668 00:28:19,781 --> 00:28:21,407 ‐Yeah. ‐The swages 669 00:28:21,408 --> 00:28:23,826 are interesting on a number of levels. 670 00:28:23,827 --> 00:28:26,412 One, they are unlike any other artifact 671 00:28:26,413 --> 00:28:28,623 we have found on the island. 672 00:28:28,624 --> 00:28:32,251 Two, Dr. Brosseau's compositional analysis, 673 00:28:32,252 --> 00:28:34,795 which might indicate age, 674 00:28:34,796 --> 00:28:37,423 possibly prior to the... 675 00:28:37,424 --> 00:28:39,133 discovery of the Money Pit. 676 00:28:39,134 --> 00:28:40,801 Well, this has been a great result, you guys. 677 00:28:40,802 --> 00:28:42,386 Thank you very much for helping us out. 678 00:28:42,387 --> 00:28:44,680 ‐It's always great. ‐Thanks again. It's always fun. 679 00:28:44,681 --> 00:28:46,057 Good luck with your search. 680 00:28:46,058 --> 00:28:47,559 Thank you. 681 00:28:52,814 --> 00:28:55,149 ‐ The next day... ‐Morning, Brennan. 682 00:28:55,150 --> 00:28:57,860 ‐Hey, morning, Rick. ‐Rick Lagina, along with researchers 683 00:28:57,861 --> 00:28:59,820 Paul Troutman and Doug Crowell, 684 00:28:59,821 --> 00:29:02,740 meet with geologist Terry Matheson 685 00:29:02,741 --> 00:29:05,743 and the team from Choice Drilling at Smith's Cove. 686 00:29:05,744 --> 00:29:08,496 What's the overall plan for Smith's Cove this year? 687 00:29:08,497 --> 00:29:11,123 Craig forwarded some, uh... a plan that showed 688 00:29:11,124 --> 00:29:13,292 five sites in and around that very interesting zone 689 00:29:13,293 --> 00:29:16,629 where I hope we... I think we're gonna see the coalescence 690 00:29:16,630 --> 00:29:20,299 ‐of the, uh, drain system. ‐Yeah. 691 00:29:20,300 --> 00:29:22,885 Now, are these borehole locations here, 692 00:29:22,886 --> 00:29:24,553 with the blue flags, are they... 693 00:29:24,554 --> 00:29:27,014 potential drains that we're actually after? 694 00:29:27,015 --> 00:29:28,683 Yeah. Everything seemed to be 695 00:29:28,684 --> 00:29:30,601 lining up with the Cave‐In Pit. 696 00:29:30,602 --> 00:29:33,479 So these become very important in trying to extrapolate 697 00:29:33,480 --> 00:29:35,606 ‐that drain out uphill. ‐Yes. 698 00:29:35,607 --> 00:29:38,234 We have insight as to where they might be. 699 00:29:38,235 --> 00:29:40,987 We applied GPR to try to locate them. 700 00:29:40,988 --> 00:29:43,030 Last year, after constructing 701 00:29:43,031 --> 00:29:46,867 a massive steel cofferdam around Smith's Cove, 702 00:29:46,868 --> 00:29:49,286 Rick, Marty and the team 703 00:29:49,287 --> 00:29:50,788 conducted an extensive investigation 704 00:29:50,789 --> 00:29:53,499 of the entire beach area. 705 00:29:53,500 --> 00:29:55,501 In addition to unearthing 706 00:29:55,502 --> 00:29:58,004 numerous wooden and concrete structures... 707 00:29:58,005 --> 00:30:00,381 ‐Right there. See the opening? ‐Yeah. 708 00:30:00,382 --> 00:30:02,425 ...the team discovered a portion 709 00:30:02,426 --> 00:30:05,302 of one of the five stone box drains, 710 00:30:05,303 --> 00:30:08,639 suggesting they were close to locating the place 711 00:30:08,640 --> 00:30:10,599 where the drains are believed to merge 712 00:30:10,600 --> 00:30:13,352 into a single tunnel one that leads directly 713 00:30:13,353 --> 00:30:15,479 to the original Money Pit. 714 00:30:15,480 --> 00:30:17,356 Okay. Let's roll. 715 00:30:17,357 --> 00:30:20,901 This notion was further validated when, one week ago, 716 00:30:20,902 --> 00:30:22,611 ground‐penetrating radar experts 717 00:30:22,612 --> 00:30:25,197 Steve Watson and Don Johnston 718 00:30:25,198 --> 00:30:27,283 identified a number of places 719 00:30:27,284 --> 00:30:28,784 where a tunnel could be located, 720 00:30:28,785 --> 00:30:32,413 not only at the beach, but also further uphill... 721 00:30:32,414 --> 00:30:34,331 Let's go ahead and mark that. 722 00:30:34,332 --> 00:30:37,543 ...at the area between Smith's Cove and the Money Pit site 723 00:30:37,544 --> 00:30:39,837 known as the Cave‐In Pit. 724 00:30:39,838 --> 00:30:42,006 Certainly, last year, we recognized the importance 725 00:30:42,007 --> 00:30:43,841 of the sonic drill program. 726 00:30:43,842 --> 00:30:47,386 So we're gonna do a variety of drilling 727 00:30:47,387 --> 00:30:50,389 between the Money Pit and Smith's Cove, 728 00:30:50,390 --> 00:30:53,350 and we're gonna try to find the so‐called flood tunnel. 729 00:30:53,351 --> 00:30:55,394 Certainly, there's enough interest 730 00:30:55,395 --> 00:30:57,605 in our experience in Smith's Cove 731 00:30:57,606 --> 00:30:59,982 to warrant half a dozen or more holes, 732 00:30:59,983 --> 00:31:02,526 looking for something, and that's why it's imperative 733 00:31:02,527 --> 00:31:04,612 to be "eyes on the cores" 734 00:31:04,613 --> 00:31:06,739 to see anything at all that says, "Hey, 735 00:31:06,740 --> 00:31:08,949 guys, we need to investigate this further." 736 00:31:08,950 --> 00:31:10,284 ‐Okay. ‐So, if we can get 737 00:31:10,285 --> 00:31:12,119 two points obviously, that's a line 738 00:31:12,120 --> 00:31:14,163 we can track that back to the Money Pit. 739 00:31:14,164 --> 00:31:16,040 ‐We'll be looking for those types of things. ‐Okay. 740 00:31:16,041 --> 00:31:18,000 There's a lot of things we could learn, 741 00:31:18,001 --> 00:31:19,293 but we'll not find it standing here. 742 00:31:19,294 --> 00:31:21,254 ‐All right. Let's get at it. ‐Okay. 743 00:31:22,297 --> 00:31:24,256 That's the spot. 744 00:31:24,257 --> 00:31:26,425 Much like their past 745 00:31:26,426 --> 00:31:28,302 core drilling operations in the swamp 746 00:31:28,303 --> 00:31:30,221 and the Money Pit area, 747 00:31:30,222 --> 00:31:34,141 the team will be using a 30‐ton sonic drill rig, 748 00:31:34,142 --> 00:31:36,769 which exerts powerful vibrations, 749 00:31:36,770 --> 00:31:38,771 producing a sound that pulverizes 750 00:31:38,772 --> 00:31:40,648 and advances through soil 751 00:31:40,649 --> 00:31:43,067 and other obstacles such as wood. 752 00:31:43,068 --> 00:31:45,486 A specialized coring barrel will then be used 753 00:31:45,487 --> 00:31:48,531 to extract samples of earth and other objects 754 00:31:48,532 --> 00:31:51,325 down to a depth of 500 feet. 755 00:31:51,326 --> 00:31:53,327 We know because of 756 00:31:53,328 --> 00:31:55,704 the extensive work we did in Smith's Cove 757 00:31:55,705 --> 00:31:58,582 that there are surprises in that area. 758 00:31:58,583 --> 00:32:00,292 We don't know what we're gonna find. 759 00:32:00,293 --> 00:32:02,044 We're trying to connect the dots 760 00:32:02,045 --> 00:32:04,630 between Smith's Cove work, which we know existed, 761 00:32:04,631 --> 00:32:06,257 and the Money Pit. 762 00:32:06,258 --> 00:32:07,842 And, hopefully, this process 763 00:32:07,843 --> 00:32:09,635 will allow us to do that very thing. 764 00:32:09,636 --> 00:32:12,430 ‐All right. Good luck. ‐Thanks, guys. ‐Thanks. 765 00:32:24,776 --> 00:32:26,610 ‐Here we go. ‐All right. 766 00:32:26,611 --> 00:32:28,154 Let's get after it. 767 00:32:28,155 --> 00:32:29,488 At Smith's Cove, 768 00:32:29,489 --> 00:32:31,115 researcher Paul Troutman 769 00:32:31,116 --> 00:32:33,409 and geologist Terry Matheson 770 00:32:33,410 --> 00:32:35,953 continue supervising the core drilling operation 771 00:32:35,954 --> 00:32:39,039 in the area known as the "upper beach." 772 00:32:39,040 --> 00:32:40,457 This is probably the most important 773 00:32:40,458 --> 00:32:42,293 two or three holes down here. 774 00:32:42,294 --> 00:32:43,711 You know, if we're gonna hit a flood tunnel, it's probably 775 00:32:43,712 --> 00:32:45,045 ‐gonna be right here. ‐ All right. 776 00:32:45,046 --> 00:32:46,672 So the terrain has changed a little bit, 777 00:32:46,673 --> 00:32:48,674 ‐uh, in the past hundred years. ‐Yeah. 778 00:32:48,675 --> 00:32:52,094 And so, we've calculated that you at least need to go 90 feet, 779 00:32:52,095 --> 00:32:55,973 ‐potentially up to 120. ‐Okay. 780 00:32:55,974 --> 00:32:59,643 Although, when they were first discovered in 1850, 781 00:32:59,644 --> 00:33:01,812 the five stone box drains were located 782 00:33:01,813 --> 00:33:04,523 just a few feet beneath the coastal area, 783 00:33:04,524 --> 00:33:06,483 it is believed that the main tunnel 784 00:33:06,484 --> 00:33:08,485 leading to the original Money Pit 785 00:33:08,486 --> 00:33:12,574 could be as much as 90 feet deep, or even deeper. 786 00:33:14,618 --> 00:33:16,660 The topography, the elevation 787 00:33:16,661 --> 00:33:18,954 has significantly changed over the years 788 00:33:18,955 --> 00:33:21,665 in the area of Smith's Cove and the Money Pit. 789 00:33:21,666 --> 00:33:25,002 Drastic change such that we don't know exactly 790 00:33:25,003 --> 00:33:26,837 what that elevation change has been. 791 00:33:26,838 --> 00:33:28,839 So, as part of this process, 792 00:33:28,840 --> 00:33:31,217 we start looking significantly at 50 feet 793 00:33:31,218 --> 00:33:33,802 for a so‐called flood tunnel, 794 00:33:33,803 --> 00:33:36,680 and probably do not exceed 120 or 130. 795 00:33:36,681 --> 00:33:38,432 We want to be certain we don't miss anything. 796 00:33:38,433 --> 00:33:42,061 ‐Is this to...? ‐73. 797 00:33:42,062 --> 00:33:46,190 ‐73. ‐And a half. 798 00:33:48,818 --> 00:33:53,489 Terry, this is... So that's 69 and a half to 73 and a half. 799 00:33:53,490 --> 00:33:55,659 Okay. Thank you. 800 00:34:06,878 --> 00:34:09,088 It's pretty cobbly, this run. 801 00:34:09,089 --> 00:34:11,048 It's a little bit more moisture‐rich 802 00:34:11,049 --> 00:34:14,760 than the last one was, but... everything else is in place. 803 00:34:14,761 --> 00:34:17,137 ‐It's not too disturbed at this far. ‐ It's a subtlety. 804 00:34:17,138 --> 00:34:18,806 So that's a little disappointing. 805 00:34:18,807 --> 00:34:20,057 ‐It is. ‐But optimal. 806 00:34:20,058 --> 00:34:21,267 Yeah. We still... 807 00:34:21,268 --> 00:34:23,143 ‐We're still ten feet above... ‐Mm‐hmm. 808 00:34:23,144 --> 00:34:25,729 ...the pay zone that we hope to encounter. 809 00:34:25,730 --> 00:34:27,064 Do another 20 feet 810 00:34:27,065 --> 00:34:28,274 ‐and see what we turn out. ‐ Yep. 811 00:34:28,275 --> 00:34:29,359 ‐Let's see what happens. ‐ All right. 812 00:34:37,409 --> 00:34:39,493 Pretty regular stuff, Mike? 813 00:34:39,494 --> 00:34:42,705 The last third of that run was very soft. 814 00:34:42,706 --> 00:34:45,667 Good. Well, we're in the zone of interest, so that's great. 815 00:34:50,922 --> 00:34:53,257 We done here, Terry? 816 00:34:53,258 --> 00:34:55,342 No. We got quite a bit more to go yet. 817 00:34:55,343 --> 00:34:57,012 We're only a little over halfway. 818 00:34:58,096 --> 00:34:59,763 What depth are we at, Mike? 819 00:34:59,764 --> 00:35:02,016 ‐91. ‐91, so... 820 00:35:02,017 --> 00:35:03,810 That's our zone of interest. 821 00:35:09,983 --> 00:35:12,610 Soft clays. 822 00:35:12,611 --> 00:35:14,445 That's just... it's not just soft. 823 00:35:14,446 --> 00:35:17,489 It's... there's no structure to it. 824 00:35:17,490 --> 00:35:19,950 Amorphous. 825 00:35:19,951 --> 00:35:22,829 ‐We haven't seen anything like this before. ‐No. 826 00:35:24,164 --> 00:35:25,789 Lots of little stones 827 00:35:25,790 --> 00:35:27,291 ‐inside of it, too. ‐Yeah. 828 00:35:27,292 --> 00:35:29,835 ‐This has, uh... ‐There's a rock. 829 00:35:29,836 --> 00:35:31,503 ...been significantly affected 830 00:35:31,504 --> 00:35:33,464 ‐by something. ‐ Yeah. 831 00:35:33,465 --> 00:35:35,549 Wet clay? 832 00:35:35,550 --> 00:35:37,509 Mixed with small stones? 833 00:35:37,510 --> 00:35:40,012 Could the strange nature of the soil 834 00:35:40,013 --> 00:35:42,139 be evidence of the main flood tunnel? 835 00:35:42,140 --> 00:35:45,851 It's more saturated than it was the last run that we had. 836 00:35:45,852 --> 00:35:50,314 There's no, uh, natural in situ features left. 837 00:35:50,315 --> 00:35:54,652 I see a ghosty bedding here, and then it's just destroyed. 838 00:35:54,653 --> 00:35:59,115 Could have been the recipient of a great, enormous blast. 839 00:36:01,576 --> 00:36:04,286 But we haven't found the channel yet. 840 00:36:04,287 --> 00:36:05,829 We didn't see it above, 841 00:36:05,830 --> 00:36:07,164 so, hopefully, we'll see it below. 842 00:36:07,165 --> 00:36:08,832 Could be in this next string 843 00:36:08,833 --> 00:36:10,251 ‐that he's pulling up here. ‐Yeah. 844 00:36:15,256 --> 00:36:16,924 What depth is this, Mike? 845 00:36:16,925 --> 00:36:19,344 99. 846 00:36:22,389 --> 00:36:24,139 Is it breaking apart pretty good? 847 00:36:24,140 --> 00:36:27,518 Yep. There's some, uh, darker spots in there, too. 848 00:36:27,519 --> 00:36:30,230 Potentially organics there. 849 00:36:31,523 --> 00:36:33,524 ‐ Hey, Rick. ‐Hey. 850 00:36:33,525 --> 00:36:36,443 ‐Just in time. ‐So we're‐we're at 99 feet. 851 00:36:36,444 --> 00:36:38,529 Where are... where's that? 852 00:36:38,530 --> 00:36:41,825 95‐ish. 853 00:36:45,537 --> 00:36:47,830 Is that my imagination, or does that smell 854 00:36:47,831 --> 00:36:50,458 ‐a little bit charred or burnt? ‐It does. It does. 855 00:36:59,759 --> 00:37:01,301 Whoa. Look at this. 856 00:37:01,302 --> 00:37:02,928 What is that, do you think? 857 00:37:02,929 --> 00:37:04,555 Whoa, baby. 858 00:37:04,556 --> 00:37:06,890 That's very interesting, Paul. 859 00:37:06,891 --> 00:37:08,892 That's a piece of dynamite right there. 860 00:37:08,893 --> 00:37:10,186 Yep. ‐Wow. 861 00:37:15,734 --> 00:37:17,276 Woah, baby. 862 00:37:17,277 --> 00:37:19,069 While searching for the elusive 863 00:37:19,070 --> 00:37:20,863 flood tunnel system at Smith's Cove... 864 00:37:20,864 --> 00:37:22,281 There you go. Right there. 865 00:37:22,282 --> 00:37:23,699 Right in here. 866 00:37:23,700 --> 00:37:25,576 There's some man‐made stuff right there. 867 00:37:25,577 --> 00:37:27,494 ...Rick Lagina and other members 868 00:37:27,495 --> 00:37:31,081 of the Oak Island team have made a surprising discovery. 869 00:37:31,082 --> 00:37:32,750 That's a piece of dynamite right there. 870 00:37:32,751 --> 00:37:34,001 That's incredible. 871 00:37:34,002 --> 00:37:35,627 What a find. 872 00:37:35,628 --> 00:37:37,756 It's what generated this blast. 873 00:37:39,299 --> 00:37:42,593 That smells like gunpowder even today, doesn't it? 874 00:37:42,594 --> 00:37:45,095 ‐Take a smell of that. ‐Oh, yeah. 875 00:37:45,096 --> 00:37:47,681 You can smell the dynamite in the till. 876 00:37:47,682 --> 00:37:50,100 Like the dynamite went off yesterday. 877 00:37:50,101 --> 00:37:51,518 Dynamite. 878 00:37:51,519 --> 00:37:53,896 Found buried some 95 feet deep 879 00:37:53,897 --> 00:37:56,106 below the beach at Smith's Cove. 880 00:37:56,107 --> 00:37:57,900 And in the same area 881 00:37:57,901 --> 00:38:00,360 as the island's legendary flood tunnel. 882 00:38:00,361 --> 00:38:03,405 But what does it mean? 883 00:38:03,406 --> 00:38:05,532 Look. There's the paper wrapping, 884 00:38:05,533 --> 00:38:07,618 I would say, on the chunk of that dynamite. 885 00:38:07,619 --> 00:38:09,411 Look at the cut edge. 886 00:38:09,412 --> 00:38:10,954 And there... yeah, it's on the end 887 00:38:10,955 --> 00:38:12,122 'cause there's a square edge. 888 00:38:12,123 --> 00:38:13,540 Okay. Yeah. 889 00:38:13,541 --> 00:38:15,626 Oh, is this another piece here? 890 00:38:15,627 --> 00:38:18,086 ‐Wow, look at that. ‐ More than just a piece. 891 00:38:18,087 --> 00:38:21,006 That's a chunk of the tube that they must have put it down in. 892 00:38:21,007 --> 00:38:24,176 ‐Yep. ‐Good eye, Paul. Wow. 893 00:38:24,177 --> 00:38:26,470 So we got the paper from the dynamite. 894 00:38:26,471 --> 00:38:29,181 We've got the tube or something or other that they put it in. 895 00:38:29,182 --> 00:38:32,226 And we've got evidence of a blast. 896 00:38:32,227 --> 00:38:35,646 This helps validate from 1897 to 1898, 897 00:38:35,647 --> 00:38:37,689 within those two years, for Oak Island Treasure Company 898 00:38:37,690 --> 00:38:39,942 ‐for setting off the dynamite. ‐Yeah. 899 00:38:39,943 --> 00:38:44,029 In 1897, nearly 50 years after 900 00:38:44,030 --> 00:38:46,573 the stone box drains were first discovered, 901 00:38:46,574 --> 00:38:49,326 members of the Oak Island Treasure Company, 902 00:38:49,327 --> 00:38:52,204 led by Frederick Blair, devised a plan 903 00:38:52,205 --> 00:38:54,624 to permanently disable the flood tunnels. 904 00:38:56,501 --> 00:38:59,670 Approximately 50 feet above the high tide mark, 905 00:38:59,671 --> 00:39:02,339 they drilled five boreholes in a line, 906 00:39:02,340 --> 00:39:05,384 down to a depth of some 90 feet, 907 00:39:05,385 --> 00:39:07,678 and then set off between 50 908 00:39:07,679 --> 00:39:11,849 to 75 pounds of dynamite in each one. 909 00:39:11,850 --> 00:39:14,017 If the plan had worked, 910 00:39:14,018 --> 00:39:16,144 they would be able to dig in the Money Pit 911 00:39:16,145 --> 00:39:18,480 without the threat of massive flooding. 912 00:39:18,481 --> 00:39:21,692 ‐Unfortunately, it didn't. 913 00:39:21,693 --> 00:39:24,528 But shortly after the operation, 914 00:39:24,529 --> 00:39:27,573 water began boiling up and out of the Money Pit, 915 00:39:27,574 --> 00:39:29,867 leading the workers to speculate 916 00:39:29,868 --> 00:39:31,910 that the flood tunnel must lie somewhere 917 00:39:31,911 --> 00:39:34,246 in the vicinity of the blast holes. 918 00:39:34,247 --> 00:39:36,748 Could the evidence of dynamite 919 00:39:36,749 --> 00:39:39,042 mean the Laginas and their partners are close 920 00:39:39,043 --> 00:39:41,920 to locating the fabled flooding system? 921 00:39:41,921 --> 00:39:44,298 When they dropped the dynamite down that hole, 922 00:39:44,299 --> 00:39:46,091 the water in the Money Pit 923 00:39:46,092 --> 00:39:48,468 and the Cave‐In Pit boiled for hours. 924 00:39:48,469 --> 00:39:51,555 You know, if you find that, you know, 925 00:39:51,556 --> 00:39:54,641 maybe we do more drilling in the area. 926 00:39:54,642 --> 00:39:56,226 Try to define that connection. 927 00:39:56,227 --> 00:39:57,936 There. Go ahead. 928 00:39:57,937 --> 00:40:00,063 ‐You see the flat edge of it there? ‐Yeah. 929 00:40:00,064 --> 00:40:01,607 We found the blast hole, certainly, 930 00:40:01,608 --> 00:40:03,400 but what does that tell us? 931 00:40:03,401 --> 00:40:05,611 Now we're searching for what they were searching for: 932 00:40:05,612 --> 00:40:07,154 ‐the flood tunnel. ‐Yeah. 933 00:40:07,155 --> 00:40:08,655 Now it's a matter of: 934 00:40:08,656 --> 00:40:10,699 How much more do we want to search around 935 00:40:10,700 --> 00:40:12,242 to try and find the tunnel? 936 00:40:12,243 --> 00:40:14,578 The tunnel should go more or less in this direction, 937 00:40:14,579 --> 00:40:16,747 so if you want to find that, 938 00:40:16,748 --> 00:40:19,458 you want to go up and down the hill, not side to side. 939 00:40:19,459 --> 00:40:22,419 ‐Yeah. ‐So chase it towards the uphill, 940 00:40:22,420 --> 00:40:25,213 maybe try to find wood to make an assumption 941 00:40:25,214 --> 00:40:27,257 ‐that there's a structure or tunnel. ‐Structure. 942 00:40:27,258 --> 00:40:29,343 ‐Okay. ‐Okay. ‐Yeah. 943 00:40:29,344 --> 00:40:31,011 Chase the path to where we know it is. 944 00:40:31,012 --> 00:40:33,805 The hope is that we can find 945 00:40:33,806 --> 00:40:35,557 something above the Cave‐In Pit, 946 00:40:35,558 --> 00:40:37,559 whether it be a tunnel or tunnels. 947 00:40:37,560 --> 00:40:40,103 Uh, maybe even a previously unknown shaft 948 00:40:40,104 --> 00:40:43,190 that, for the first time ever, may put an X on the ground 949 00:40:43,191 --> 00:40:45,108 where the original Money Pit might be. 950 00:40:45,109 --> 00:40:47,361 It would be huge. 951 00:40:47,362 --> 00:40:49,780 ‐All right. ‐Okay. Good luck. 952 00:40:49,781 --> 00:40:51,990 Okay, Rick. See you later. Thanks. 953 00:40:51,991 --> 00:40:55,077 For the Laginas and their team, 954 00:40:55,078 --> 00:40:57,829 finding evidence that they may, at last, 955 00:40:57,830 --> 00:41:01,041 be closing in on Oak Island's legendary flood tunnel 956 00:41:01,042 --> 00:41:03,293 has them more hopeful than ever 957 00:41:03,294 --> 00:41:06,129 that they will soon make a breakthrough discovery. 958 00:41:06,130 --> 00:41:08,298 But as they continue to drill 959 00:41:08,299 --> 00:41:09,967 beneath the beach at Smith's Cove, 960 00:41:09,968 --> 00:41:11,969 where will it lead? 961 00:41:11,970 --> 00:41:16,139 To a treasure vault filled with vast riches? 962 00:41:16,140 --> 00:41:19,476 Or will they find out that the island's secrets 963 00:41:19,477 --> 00:41:22,521 are more complex and more dangerous 964 00:41:22,522 --> 00:41:25,441 than they could ever have imagined? 965 00:41:27,860 --> 00:41:30,570 Next time on The Curse of Oak Island... 966 00:41:30,571 --> 00:41:33,198 The goal is to delineate an area 967 00:41:33,199 --> 00:41:34,950 where a possible flood tunnel might be. 968 00:41:34,951 --> 00:41:36,410 We got something here, guys. 969 00:41:36,411 --> 00:41:37,995 This is the entrance. 970 00:41:37,996 --> 00:41:39,287 Let's dig it up. 971 00:41:39,288 --> 00:41:40,664 ‐You know? 972 00:41:40,665 --> 00:41:41,748 Look at that. 973 00:41:41,749 --> 00:41:44,126 That is really, really unusual. 974 00:41:44,127 --> 00:41:46,003 See the braiding around it? 975 00:41:46,004 --> 00:41:49,047 To me, it has sort of a maritime look to it. 976 00:41:49,048 --> 00:41:50,674 Right there. Oh, wow. 977 00:41:50,675 --> 00:41:53,552 These are pieces, probably of beams. 978 00:41:53,553 --> 00:41:56,013 It's probably a tunnel that we're in. 979 00:41:56,014 --> 00:41:57,682 Subtitled by Diego Moraes www.oakisland.tk 74979

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