09x09 - The Unusual Suspects

Episode transcripts for the TV show "The Curse of Oak Island". Aired: January 5, 2014 to present.*
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Follows brothers Marty and Rick as they search for the infamous treasure on Oak Island.
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09x09 - The Unusual Suspects

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Tonight on
The Curse of Oak Island...

The Portuguese found signs
of gold here

- and needed a place to hide it away.
- Wow.

If that is indeed Shaft Six,

we know there's a tunnel
leading directly

to the Money Pit.
You follow the tunnel,

it's game on, then.

All it takes is one good find.

What's that right there, Gary?

Well, that's interesting.

Might be a lid.

There could be a chest in there.

That's pretty amazing.

You'll hold in your hand

the irrefutable proof

that the story
of Oak Island is real.

There is an
island in the North Atlantic

where people
have been looking for

an incredible treasure
for more than 200 years.

So far, they have found
a stone slab

with strange symbols
carved into it...

man-made workings
that date to medieval times,

and a lead cross
whose origin may be connected

to the Knights Templar.

To date, six men have d*ed

trying to solve the mystery.

And according to legend,
one more will have to die

before the treasure
can be found.

- Here we go!
- Yup.

- So, we're drilling here, HI-4.
- Yup.

As another exciting
day begins on Oak Island,

brothers Rick and Marty Lagina,
along with their team, believe

that they may be on the verge

of not only locating
the original Money Pit shaft...

- We could be starting to chase Shaft Six.
- Correct.

But also a vast treasure

that people have been
attempting to recover

for more than two centuries.

So, this hole will be drilled
right in the heart of Shaft Six.

Yup. If that is
indeed Shaft Six,

we know at 118 feet,

there's a tunnel
going off of that,

- leading directly to the Money Pit.
- Right.

You got wood.

Yeah, we've got some stacked
timbers there, it looks like.

One week
ago, while drilling a borehole

within their strategic grid,
known as G-2...

- That says to me, probably the shaft.
- I would say.

At depth of 80 to 90 feet,

the team obtained evidence
of a wall believed to be part

of a structure
simply known as "Shaft Six."

Definitely not circular saw.

- This is relatively old.
- Yeah.

Constructed
by searchers in 1861,

this 118-foot-deep shaft
features a lateral tunnel

that not only connects
to the original Money Pit,

but is also believed
to contain a debris field

full of valuables that resulted
from a catastrophic collapse

that occurred
during its construction.

We got a core coming!

Now, as the
team drills Borehole HI-4,

which sets just
12-and-a-half feet

from Borehole G-2...

Sixty-nine.

- 59 to 69, coming at us, Charles.
- Yup.

It is their
hope to recover solid evidence

of the gold and silver that
they've recently detected

from water sample tests
across the Money Pit area.

If they are successful,
Rick, Marty and the team

will dig a ten-foot-wide
steel-cased shaft here

to intercept the Shaft Six
tunnel and recover the riches

believed to lie within it.

I've always believed
that finding Shaft Six is the way

to really decide whether or not
the Money Pit can be found.

Shaft Six was sunk to 118 feet,
a tunnel driven 18 feet.

We don't know
the cardinal direction of that.

So, delineate it,

see if the measurements
of the shaft work, and then,

try to determine
the orientation of the shaft.

What's the good word, Adam?

- 75.
- Thanks, Adam.

69 to 75.

- Here we go.
- Yup.

Charles, we have wood.

Maybe this will be the stacked
timbers we've been looking for.

Yup, that's apparently
stacked timbers.

Gives me a good indication
of potentially a, uh, shaft.

Could be we're clipping
the edge of a shaft.

That's what I'm thinking.

Evidence of a shaft

found some 70 feet deep
in Borehole HI-4?

Has the team possibly found
a second wall of Shaft Six?

It could be a corner piece
right there.

If so, then
they might not only be able

to determine the orientation
of the shaft,

but also the precise location
of the original Money Pit.

Hey, Rick.

Arriving for an update

on the morning's
drilling progress

are Rick Lagina,
surveyor Steve Guptill

and Oak Island
historian Doug Crowell.

What have we got?

HI-4 is in the southeast
quadrant of our shaft.

We've come through
a substantial portion

of the wall from about,
what was that?

- 71?
- 71 to...

To about 75 feet.

What we feel was

the outside wall of,
hopefully, Shaft Six.

If we find the tunnel
associated with that,

you'll hold in your hand
the irrefutable proof

that the story
of Oak Island is real.

Is defined by one thing
and one thing only:

hold the evidence in your hand.

Find the one thing.
That's success.

Look, now we have
a proper orientation,

and one could make
a very good case

that the Money Pit...
It's certainly close.

It helps us with our,

you know, "where do we put
a caisson?" decision.

- Yup.
- Always.

Keep after it. Keep up
the good work. Good luck, guys.

- We'll do our best. Thank you.
- Thank you. - Talk to you later.

As efforts to reach the tunnel

connected to Shaft Six continue

at the Money Pit,
later that afternoon...

- Does that stink!
- Yeah.

Marty Lagina joins Doug Crowell,

metal detection expert
Gary Drayton,

and heavy equipment
operator Billy Gerhardt

as they continue excavating
at the southernmost region

of the triangle-shaped swamp.

Get me up to speed.
What's going on here?

We're finding wood.

The wood that we're finding

is really,
really interesting, Marty.

Mm-hmm. You found any metal?

No, no metal yet.

We're digging deep out here,

and we're working our way

towards where we found
that piece of wood

- dated to 600, 700 AD.
- Mm-hmm.

Over the past two weeks,

the Oak Island team has made
numerous discoveries

in this area near
the western end

of the massive
stone ship's wharf,

which may be more than
500 years old

and also of Portuguese origin.

These finds include
a mysterious tree stump,

offering more evidence that
the swamp was once dry land,

wooden survey stakes
and hand-hewn planks

that may be connected
to the ancient wharf.

It was in this same area that,
one year ago,

the team recovered a potential
piece of a ship's railing

that was carbon-dated
to the seventh century AD,

and also where they detected
a massive, 200-foot-long

ship-shaped anomaly
using seismic scanning

three years ago.

It's very unusual.

Let's not just dork around it.

- Yeah.
- Would it be S-H-I-P?

Would that be
what everybody's thinking?

What do you think about
having him go down three feet?

Uh, yeah. I'd like to do that
because along this bank...

- Mm-hmm.
- Where the road is here,

we've found a heck of a lot

of wharf pins, ship's spikes.

- Yeah.
- Yeah. I wouldn't mind going deeper.

So, while you're here,

here's a thought, Billy.
It won't take too long

as long as this machine's
so nicely situated.

Come by, take, like,
about a foot of that sand,

put it to the side,
metal detect.

Take another foot, another foot,
get down maybe four feet

just to see if there's something
in that sand.

- Yeah, now I'm definitely for that.
- Okay. Thank you.

- Yeah, we're going to do it, Gary.
- Yeah.

- Should be something in there.
- Yeah, should be something.

One thing that
is just totally inexplicable

was a piece of wood carbon-dated

twice, uh, to AD 700.

Okay, well, that's...
that's an outlier.

So, because it's such an outlier
and so different,

we need to do more searching.

Whoa. Yeah, what's that, Gary?

Let's have a look. Wow.

That is a big piece, isn't it?

Oh, baby!

That looks like it was cut.

Near the southern
edge of the triangle-shaped swamp,

Marty Lagina
and members of the team

have just unearthed
a potentially important clue.

- It looks like one of the old survey stakes.
- Oh.

Hey, that might be.
It might have been cut.

Yeah. What do you think
it is, Marty?

It looks, sort of, Gary,
like the stakes they used

- that would laid out the road.
- Yeah.

So, maybe back to the 1600s.

- It looks sort of like that.
- Yeah.

Another possible survey stake?

Could it be connected to
the massive stone ship's wharf

which sets just east
of this location in the swamp?

Or could it be related
in some way

to the 200-foot-long
anomaly detected

by seismic scanning in 2018?

One resembling the size
and shape of a ship?

Come on. Just one good signal.

What's that right there, Gary?

- What?
- That weird thing on the side.

That's planking.

Planking or decking or...

But that looks very interesting.

- Got that beveled edge on it.
- Yeah.

Sure looks like...

decking? Wooden decking

- or planking to me.
- Yeah.

Wooden deck planking?

Could Gary Drayton be correct

that the team has
just found more evidence

of a ship in the swamp?

If so, might it also be
connected to the piece

of believed ship's railing
found one year ago

that dated to as early
as the seventh century AD?

I am surprised at
how much stuff is in that swamp.

Interesting things. I mean,
the paved area, the stone road.

All the artifacts in
the southeast corner, and now,

as we dig along the beach,
all kinds of pieces of wood.

Potentially significant
pieces of wood.

- Yeah. That's shaped wood for sure.
- Yeah.

"What's it mean?"
is the question.

After we clean it up,
we might have a better idea

- of what it actually is.
- Yeah.

All right, let's keep digging.

The following morning,

while operations continue
at the swamp...

and in the Money Pit area...

Doug has come up with
a presentation which I find

intriguing, to say the least.

In the w*r room, Rick Lagina

has gathered members of the team
to hear a presentation

by Doug Crowell
that he has prepared

regarding some
of their recent discoveries.

What encapsulates Oak Island
and the search for answers here,

of course, is the "who, what,
where, when, why and how."

Well, Doug has taken it upon
himself to address the "who."

So, Doug, we will
turn it over to you, please.

Yes, well, so,
what really kicked off

this preliminary report

is the finding of these
two round stones on the island.

What was really interesting
about these is,

these are not likely native
to Nova Scotia.

Whoa! Look at that!

- It's a round sh*t!
- Wow.

Two months ago,

while investigating
a possible ancient pathway

between the swamp
and the Money Pit on Lot 16,

Rick and Gary Drayton

discovered a stone sh*t
or small cannonball.

Incredibly, it was not only
nearly identical

to one excavated
from the Money Pit in 2019,

but when the team
had them analyzed

by geology professor Dr. Robert
Raeside, in his opinion,

one of the likely places
they originated was the Azores,

a group of islands in Portugal.

These would classify as what
they'd call "two pounders".

So, they'd be sh*t out
of a-a deck g*n

or a swivel g*n, a rail g*n
off the side of a ship.

- Wow.
- And the Portuguese were the very first

to put cannon
on board their ships.

The stone sh*t came into play
around the early 1400s,

and dwindled out of...
out of use in the mid-1600s.

So, if these were from a ship

or individuals
that visited Oak Island,

and they had this type
of armament with them,

that narrows the range
from, in my mind,

from the 1400s
through to the very early 1600s.

- That's very interesting.
- The Portuguese

and their exploration
along our shores

make them one
of the early suspects,

I think, in our mystery.

- Oh, wow.
- The Portuguese

have been coming over,

I'm certain, for years.
Fishing.

The question is, what else
might have they been doing here?

How else might have they been
utilizing this area?

Hmm.

According to documented history,

Portuguese explorer
Joao Alvares Fagundes

arrived on the shores
of Nova Scotia in 1520,

referring to the area as
"The Land of the Cod Fish."

Other Portuguese expeditions
would also lead

to settlements in Cape Breton
and Newfoundland, in addition

to their colonization
of large areas of Africa, Asia,

and South America where
they collected vast amounts

of gold, silver
and precious jewels.

However,
over the past two years,

the Oak Island team has made
numerous discoveries

that suggest the Portuguese
also visited Oak Island.

These finds include
the massive stone ship's wharf,

uncovered one year ago
in the swamp,

a fragment of a cannon on Lot 4,

and along with the stone sh*t
found in the Money Pit area,

evidence of wooden tunnels
that have been carbon-dated

to between the late fifteenth

and the early
seventeenth centuries.

You know, what's interesting
about that is,

you know, we looked at French,

we looked at British, but
we never looked at Portuguese.

- No.
- No.

If the
Portuguese were on Oak Island

more than 200 years prior

to the discovery
of the Money Pit,

it begs the question,
was it merely

for the purposes of creating
a fishing settlement?

So, what other evidence
do we have that

the Portuguese were here
on our shores in Nova Scotia?

Well, Professor
Ross Wilheim, in 1971,

he thought that, after 1526,
the bulk of the gold and silver

shipped to Europe
from the New World

was moved in guarded convoys
of fleets of vessels.

So when these treasure fleets
were making their turn

towards the Azores,
if they encountered storms,

the ships were driven towards
our coasts here.

And they would need a place
to safe haven from the storm

and a place to repair.

Well, you know,
we're finding items that suggest

ship repair, both in
Smith's Cove and in the swamp.

Well, if they were looking
for any place that was a great

area to harbor out
for a while, they would have

definitely come around
Oak Island and into Mahone Bay.

Yeah. Actually, one of
the things we stumbled across

was maps through the 1500s
into the early 1600s.

And if you look here,

if you see here on the coast
of Nova Scotia,

this is Cape Breton,
Newfoundland.

Here is some place called
"Port of Refuge,"

which looks surprisingly
positioned to match Mahone Bay.

The Portuguese, because
of their early exploration

and looking for gold
in the New World,

may have come to Nova Scotia
and found signs of gold here

and were looking, actively
exploring for that gold,

and needed a place
to process it or hide it away.

- Interesting.
- We know they were here,

- so that makes them a more likely suspect...
- Yeah.

Than the... anyone we can't
prove was along our shores.

That's great.

Could Doug's theory be correct?

Is it possible that while
transporting vast riches

from South America back
to Portugal centuries ago,

a Portuguese expedition
landed on Oak Island

and constructed the man-made
workings in the swamp,

as well as the Money Pit?

There's a lot of information
here that needs to be looked at

much more in-depth,
all right, because

who knows where this may lead?

And the one critique I have is,

we're supposed to be
putting Xs through people,

not creating more suspects.

There certainly is
some historical narrative about

the Portuguese having been
in the area.

The other evidence, really,

regarding a possible connection

between the Portuguese
and Oak Island is compelling.

But I think there's a lot

of connective tissue
that needs to be developed,

if we really, truly want

to understand
the Oak Island mystery.

Oak Island mystery is all
about the search for the truth.

And I applaud you
for bringing this to the fore.

But eyes and boots approach,
there's a lot of work out back,

- so let's get after it.
- All right.

All right.

Okay, Steve. Bring us up
to date on the drilling.

So, as per Rick's instructions,

we wanted to focus on the
western portion of the Money Pit

- where Shaft Six could be.
- Right.

After drilling
into what they believe

are two walls of a 19th-century
searcher shaft,

known as Shaft Six...

I've outlined this area.
So, we've defined the shaft.

Brothers Rick and Marty Lagina

meet with members of the team
in the research center

to pick their next
drilling location.

One they hope will intercept
a tunnel some 118 feet deep

that could potentially contain
a debris field of treasure

that resulted from a collapse
of the Money Pit in 1861.

That's the next
step. Let's find the tunnel,

- chase it to the Money Pit.
- Given Steve's plotting

of the possible orientation,

the tunnel could be driven
north right by F-4.

We know that F-4 has produced

high gold signature
in the water.

If we move north,
we can possibly

intercept the-the tunnel
off of Six,

- if it's there.
- Mm-hmm.

Earlier this
year, the team conducted

water sampling tests
for precious metals...

That's it.

In a number

of previously-drilled boreholes
across the Money Pit area.

Incredibly, several
showed high concentrations

of both silver and gold,
including Borehole F-4.

Is it possible that F-4
intercepted the tunnel

connected to Shaft Six
and the original Money Pit?

Where do you want to drill it?

We have to stick somewhere
around F-4, maybe F-2.

Somewhere around there.

So, that's my hope.

I would go south a foot,
and we'd call it F.25-4?

I agree. It-it makes sense.

- Okay. - Yeah.
- Historically,

the Great Collapse
happened, right?

And all that debris
from the Money Pit came down

and flooded through
the tunnel to Shaft Six.

So, if there's debris
from the treasure chamber

in the Money Pit, it could
well be in that tunnel.

That's coming
into our zone of interest.

Heck, if that's
the debris field, I mean,

that's a great spot for us.

Moving the
drill rig to the F line

is important because F-4 is

where we got the highest
gold and silver signature.

And that's where
it becomes interesting,

because the linear line
of water sampling,

one could possibly
interpret that

as the tunnel from Shaft Six.

I've always said
the debris field is

where you'll find the one thing.

I'm excited, so, uh, let's go,
uh, bore that hole.

- Let's do it.
- Agreed. Enough talking. Let's go stake.

- Yup. Yeah.
- Okay?

- See you out there.
- Yup.

While Rick,
Marty and members of the team

head to the Money Pit...

We're getting close, guys.

- Remember, it's just up here.
- Yeah.

Surveyor Steve Guptill heads

to Lot 4 on the western side
of the island, along with

metal detection expert
Gary Drayton and Jack Begley.

So, you think
this is the detector

that's going to be able
to sniff out the mag hit?

You got that right, mate.
This is the big g*ns.

GPX-5000, mate, in combination
with that Equinox is fantastic.

We're going from knee-deep
to chest-deep.

Gary, Jack and Steve

are continuing
to search for evidence

of a mysterious feature
labeled on a reported

14th-century map of Oak Island

curiously known as
"The Hole Under the Hatch."

The map, which belonged
to the late author

and researcher Zena Halpern,

is believed to have been
made by members

of the medieval order
of the Knights Templar.

Let's get stuck in.
So, start here?

Yeah, let's start
in the center position,

which is right in here.

I'll use a spiral
search pattern.

I'll just keep going round
and round and round

- until you hear me shouting.
- All right.

All right, I'm off in the woods.

Over the past three weeks,

while trying to verify if this
feature could be in the area,

the team has discovered
a number of compelling clues,

like a construction tool,
known as an adze,

that could date
as far back as 1620,

the fragment of a possible
Portuguese cannon,

and a large metallic anomaly

detected with
a high-powered magnetometer.

Lot 4, to me,

has played
a prominent role to date

in this year's search agenda.

Given what Gary has found,

I think it demands that
we see what else is there

and very thoroughly investigate
all the targets.

In order to find more evidence

that will help the team
obtain a permit

to excavate
in search of the hatch,

Gary is using the GPX-5000,

a high-powered metal detector
with an 18-inch coil capable

of identifying targets
up to five feet deep.

Big target here, guys.

This is a screamer.

I'm going to say
that's probably our anomaly.

Okay. Hopefully,
it's something good.

I'm on my way.

It's here.

- That's the center?
- Yeah.

Go on, mate. You can do it.

All right.

Let's see if I can pinpoint it.

Oh. It's deeper.

Deeper, yeah.

And that's where you're just
getting the edge of it.

Oh, mate, should I check it?

Yeah.

Yeah, it's out.

Yup, sounds like you got it out.

Now you're on it. Yeah.

Ooh, look at this!

What do you have?

Oh!

Yeah, a very, very
interesting piece.

What do you have there?

Metal. I don't know what it is.

While searching
for evidence of a possible hatch

or tunnel entrance on Lot 4,

Gary Drayton has just made a
potentially important discovery.

Wow. Look at that, mate.

Actually, this kind of looks
like a massive iron staple.

It looks like it's broken,
but this is definitely something

that you would expect
to be in an old hatch.

Oh! What time period
do you think that's from?

More than likely,
it's pre-1830s.

- This is what we're looking for.
- Mm-hmm.

I don't feel there's a lot
of manganese in this.

- For...
- Fits in with over by the swamp

- and the Money Pit.
- Yeah.

Chunky piece of iron.

And it's in such
good condition, as well.

But to me,
it looks like it's broken.

And if you was looking
for a hatch,

uh, I'm assuming the hatch is...
got some wood on it.

If it is a wooden hatch,
it would have one of these

- in for sure.
- Mm-hmm.

An iron staple
or fastener unearthed on Lot 4?

Could Gary's speculation
that it's not only ancient,

but also potentially connected

to the reported "Hole Under
the Hatch" be correct?

JACK Well, we're gonna
have to find some more

to figure out exactly
what went on here.

Yeah, obviously,

- we are not the first people out here.
- Exactly.

We still have more
locations to check.

- So, that's a positive sign.
- Yup.

So, going to keep continuing
the search, and hopefully,

there's some more items
like this.

- Yeah.
- This is something

- we need to bag.
- Oh, yeah, of course.

I'll take it to Steve,


- and then you keep going, and...
- Okay, mate.

Hope we have other finds
like that, if not better.

Yeah. I think this is

a crackin' little find, mate.

The following morning

in the Money Pit area...

F.25-4!

- We're down 39 feet, Charles?
- Yup, 39.

Geologist Terry Matheson

and Oak Island historian
Charles Barkhouse

are supervising
the drilling operation

in the team's new borehole on
their strategic grid... F.25-4.

A borehole that they hope
will intercept a tunnel

some 118 feet deep
that is believed

to contain a debris field
of treasure

connected
to the original Money Pit.

We're only about
a foot away from F-4 there.

If that is indeed Shaft Six and
the tunnel coming off of that,

maybe that could account
for the high

gold and silver readings
we're getting in F-4.

Exactly.
Part of the smashed-up treasure

or a vault
that has fallen and sh*t

- into the Shaft Six tunnel.
- Yeah.

There could be a tunnel

between the shaft
and the Money Pit area.

So, we're looking for it.

And the collapse
of the Money Pit.

The water samples show the most
gold and silver right there, so,

we think we're zeroing in
on potentially at least part

of the treasure.

- We got another core coming.
- Yup.

- 119.
- 119.

Yup.

Look at this, Charles.
This is really mixed up.

In terms of constituents,
it's all till.

But look at the wood and chips
and chunks through it.

- Yeah.
- That's not at the periphery or the outside.

It's right in the core
and center.

This is definitely
clumps and chunks

of material that
was dug out, mixed with clumps

of sticks and twigs that
fell in between the clumps.

It's partially backfill
and partially

dug material.

So... we did not
intersect a tunnel.

That doesn't mean it's not
there. We just didn't hit it.

We just didn't hit it.
That's right.

Having now
reached a depth of nearly 120 feet,

and finding no hard evidence
of the Shaft Six tunnel

nor the treasure it is
believed to contain,

it appears that the team
has missed their target.

However, since they have
discovered high concentrations

of both silver and gold
in nearby Borehole F-4

through water testing, they may
not have missed by much.

And when they begin digging
ten-foot-wide caissons

in the area just
a few short weeks from now,

perhaps the ultimate discovery

connected to Shaft Six
still awaits them.

Look, it's a process,
all right? It's incremental.

And I think we're going
to stay the course and

continue to drill the grid,
and hopefully,

from that work, we'll be able

to ascertain exactly
where the spots are

to put large cans
to solve this thing.

At least we
know exactly where it isn't.

So, we can move over
and see if we hit it

- just a little further to the east or west.
- Okay.

Lots of good information.

While Terry Matheson concludes

the drilling operation
in Borehole F.25-4...

We're getting down into
this more important zone,

I think. You know,
every time we move ahead,

I'm a little more confident
that we might find

- more pieces related to what we found last year.
- Yeah. Yeah.

Charles Barkhouse
joins Gary Drayton

and other members of the team
to look for more evidence

of a possible buried ship,
and hopefully valuables,

near the southern edge
of the swamp.

But all it takes, mate,
is one good find.

- Yup, that's it.
- And let's get that good find today.

Laird and I

are gonna go over, and
we'll observe as you're digging.

Just in case we see something
that you're pulling up,

- we can warn these guys.
- All right, mate.

I'll get stuck in.

We're finding
a plethora of items,

what we deem
to be nautical finds.

There's certainly some
strange goings-on in the swamp,

and I don't think we're anywhere
near, uh, the finality of it.

All right, mate. We
need a ship's bell, don't we?

- Yeah.
- Is that a...?

Look! That's a...

Is that a piece of planking?

Looks like it's cut, as well.

It does. Yup.

- It's worth saving and cleaning up.
- Yeah.

Hey, you know what
it reminds me of?

- Could be...
- You see that curve?

It reminds me of a barrel stave.

Yeah.

A possible barrel stave?

This is one right here, too.

I think
we've found a barrel here.

Over the past year,

the team has found pieces
of cargo barrels

in the swamp that date back
500 years or more,

not only near
the cobblestone pathway,

which may be heading
toward the Money Pit,

but also near the eastern side

of the massive stone
ship's wharf.

A ship's wharf that may also
date back at least 500 years

and be of Portuguese origin.

Would be curious to see if this
matches up with the others.

Could this
potential piece of a barrel,

found in the area
where the team has also

recently unearthed
parts of a ship,

be connected
and provide more evidence

of an ancient operation to
unload cargo onto Oak Island?

- Well, we'll save it.
- Okay.

All right, mate.
Better get out of the way.

Billy Buckets is coming in.

It may be nothing,

but when I flick the bucket,
just come ahead,

just come right ahead
in front of the bucket.

There's a small
little pointy piece.

- This?
- Yeah.

Oh, wow.

Well, that's interesting.
Look at that, Scott.

- Look at that, Scott.
- That's a nice piece, Gary.

I mean, yeah,
you can definitely tell

that's not natural.
That's been shaped like that.

- No. For sure.
- Laird!

Near the southern
edge of the Oak Island swamp,

metal detection expert
Gary Drayton

along with Billy Gerhardt
and other members of the team

have just made another
potentially critical discovery.

The archaeologist is here.

Oh. What do you have?

Well, we don't know, mate.
Some kind of wooden plug.

- Huh.
- Or a pin.

Yeah. You can see
it's square here,

and then someone's
carefully tapered it.

Yeah. It's-it's just got
a nautical feel to it.

Yeah.

- And you see the beveled edges on the side?
- Yup.

I mean, if we're
finding ship's parts,

that would be well at home.

Yeah, for sure.

A possible ship's pin found

near the southern edge
of the swamp?

Dating back prior to the
14th century in Europe,

ship's pins, or belaying pins,

were made of either
metal or wood

and were used to secure
the rigging lines

for raising and lowering sails,

as well as for docking ships.

Then there's
potential for that to be quite old.

Yup, yup.

Because wooden belaying pins

were replaced by metal cleats
by the 19th century,

is it possible the team has
just discovered more evidence

of an ancient ship
buried in the swamp?

That's the good
thing about the swamp.

It might be stinky,
but it saves all the good stuff.

You know, it makes you wonder
what else is in there, right?

- Yeah.
- Or what-what we could be missing.

Yeah.

All right.
Let's get back to it.

- Thanks, Laird.
- Thank you.

I don't know about that.
Looks more like bark.

- Yeah.
- I think we're barking up the wrong tree with that one.

What is this?

That's a pretty smooth piece
of wood right there.

Oh, wow. It's interesting. Look.

That looks like it was cut.

But why would anybody ever
cut something in that way?

It stood out, didn't it?

Hey, Laird!

- They're calling you in, Laird.
- Yeah.

What do you got?

We're hoping
you can tell us, mate.

It looks like it's a...

a knot broken out
of a trunk of a tree.

Wow.

But it's clearly been cut.

You ever seen anything
like that?

No. It almost looks carved.

Yeah. It looks like it's been
cut on the top and the bottom.

Yeah. Could it be
part of a tool?

- Could well be.
- Yeah.

Almost reminds me of, like,

that wooden T square
we found in the swamp.

- Oh, yeah.
- Yeah.

- Check this out.
- Oh, God. Wow.

Last year,
after discovering the pieces

of cargo barrels
along the cobblestone path

near the eastern border
of the swamp,

Rick Lagina and members
of the team

found what they believe
to be a mason's wooden

T square measuring tool.

Okay. We're gonna look
at the wood mason's tool.

When they had it carbon-dated,

they were more than intrigued
by the results.

This one was from 1632 to 1668.

Whoa.

It's purpose-built, right?

- Yeah.
- Yeah.

Could it be possible

that the team has now found
a similar kind of tool?

If so, just what
was its purpose?

And could it be connected
to the possible fragments

of cargo barrels,
and evidence of a ship

that have also recently
been unearthed

in this region of the swamp?

It is.

This is a shaped piece of wood,

and obviously,
it had some kind of purpose.

And recovering pieces
of shaped wood is important

because this area
is very close to the area

where we recovered that piece
of ship's rail last year.

We are getting closer and closer

to, you know,
the swamp road, right?

So, I mean,
it's a fair thought to think

that the road was used
for a boat of some sort,

and now we're just getting
in the good zone.

- Yeah.
- We're finding a lot of pieces

concentrated in one area.

Hell of a lot
of interesting pieces, as well.

- Yes.
- Yeah. I'd expect to find more.

I know Rick, Marty,
and Craig are gonna be

- very interested in this piece.
- Yeah.

- Hey, guys.
- Hey, Laird.

- Here he is
-Three guys from the field.

- Three guys from the swamp.
- What you got?

Well, these are all coming out
from the same basic spot.

After discovering
a number of wooden artifacts

near the southern border
of the triangle-shaped swamp,

archaeologist Laird Niven,
along with Scott Barlow

and Billy Gerhardt,
have called a meeting

with Rick, Marty, Craig
and other members of the team

in the w*r room.

This one is a bit of a mystery.

Maybe as woodworking people,

you'll have a little
more insight into it.

- What the heck is that?
- Hmm.

Hmm.

I have no idea what that is.

When you first handed it,
I said,

- part of a piece of furniture.
- Yup.

No. You know, looks like
something must've that stained

or something was around.

Could a rope maybe
have done that?

Yeah, it does almost look
like a rope rubbing on the...

that one portion, under the lip.

I'd say you're
right. That's a rope burn.

- That's what I think it is. Yeah.
- Yeah.

Yeah. That's quite possible.

Then it's not furniture.
To me, that looks maritime.

It's all in the general
range of where we found, uh,

the ship's rail last year.

We're pretty darn close.

Could it be possible

that what Gary Drayton,
Laird, Billy and Scott

believed might be a tool
is actually another piece

of a large sailing vessel?

It was used extensively,
that's for sure.

Friction burn like that
is gonna take a while.

Mm-hmm. I think that's a much
denser piece of wood...

- Yeah.
- Because it's-it's already dry.

Yeah, so we talked
about C-14 dating,

- but maybe we should look at...
- I think we should look

- at species on that one.
- Yeah.

'Cause if it is
some exotic species,

that might tell us
something, too.

Yeah, for sure.

Well, we're kind of,
um, overwhelmed

by the stuff coming out
of the swamp.

You know, they used
to use black locust

- or something really hard to-to wind ropes around.
- Yeah.

You know,
they're pieces of wood.

They're human-shaped.

The swamp preserves them

for literally hundreds of years.

So we need
to get everything tested

to see how old the old is
and separate out the new.

Anyway, the last one...
It's a worked piece of wood.

Um, almost like it was meant
to be inserted partway.

So, possibly nautically related.

So, you know, it could've been,

uh, you know,
to hang your rope on.

How deep was that, Billy?

Two to three feet, probably.

We're just getting into the
original surface of the swamp.

I have to give you guys
credit to find this.

- Yeah.
- In one of those big buckets.

I mean, it is
a pretty interesting piece,

and it would have
been very hard to find.

Well, I mean, every time
we've gone into that swamp,

we've found answers.
Unfortunately,

don't give us
all the answers, but

you-you know, we can't
find it if we don't look, so...

For the Oak Island team,

these discoveries
offer important clues

that they hope will help
solve the treasure mystery.

However, for Tom Nolan,

they also offer
something very personal.

In 1969, his father,
the late landowner

and legendary treasure
hunter Fred Nolan,

drained the swamp,

believing that it might
hold important clues.

After finding a number of survey
stakes and parts of a ship,

including a piece of a mast,

Fred became convinced that the
swamp had been artificially made

in order to hide the wreck
of a treasure galleon.

Based on what I've seen
on Fred's maps,

I would say
you're in an ideal location.

Is it possible
that by working with Rick,

Marty and the team,
Tom is one step closer

to proving his father's theory
to be true?

Good eye.

Yeah, your team is
doing fabulous.

Okay. Go find some more stuff!

Be out as soon as we can.

Yeah, we'll
be out there to help you.

- Thanks, guys.
- Okay.

Another historic week has

come to an end on Oak Island.

And even though Rick, Marty,
Craig, and their team

still struggle to decode
the mystery of the Money Pit,

the discoveries that they keep
unearthing all across the island

only strengthen
their resolve to believe

it will all be worth it
in the end.

As they keep drilling
and digging for clues,

will their efforts lead to
the vast cache of untold riches

that people have been
searching for since 1795,

or are those efforts
leading them

to their greatest challenge
and test of will yet?

Next time on
The Curse of Oak Island...

Fingers crossed on this one.

- -Oh, yeah.
- Look at the size of that!

- Wow.
- That is crazy.

This is a tool that you would
use for moving items.

Bring your heavy stuff to shore,

- then you move it with that.
- Yes.

This tunnel, next with this

very square structure
in the Money Pit.

Oh, baby!

- Whoa!
- Whoa!

We pierced something that hasn't

been pierced in a long time.

- The famous offset chamber.
- Exactly.
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