08x20 - Fire in the Hole

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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08x20 - Fire in the Hole

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Narrator: Tonight on
the curse of oak island...

Terry: Whoa! We
got a shaft here,

- and maybe it's the money pit.
- Aaron: Wow.

That's super cool.
This would indicate

that there was a
structure in here.

- (beeping) - ooh, look at that.

- Michael j.: What's that?
- Gary: This is old.

It's typical of
early time periods.

With the narrow cork on the back,
it means

- that it was scottish that did this.
- Jack: Oh, no way!

This came from
underneath the pathway,

and they're from
one time period.

- Wow. - That's really cool.

That's stunning.

Narrator: There is an
island in the north atlantic

where people have been
looking for an incredible treasure

for more than years.

So far,
they have found a stone slab

with strange
symbols carved into it,

mysterious fragments
of human bone,

and a lead cross whose origin

may stretch back to the
days of 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.

♪ ♪

- rick: Hey, guys!
- Scott: Hey, guys.

- Marty: Hello!
- Alex: Hey, everyone. - Rick: So...

The current
update on the path...

Steve's latest
estimate is feet.

- Mm-hmm.
- Narrator: As a new day

begins on oak island

for brothers rick and marty lagina,
craig tester,

and the members of their team,

rick has gathered them to report

a potentially
significant discovery

near the man-made
triangle-shaped swamp.

A mysterious building foundation

unearthed next to
the stone pathway

that has been
determined to be extending

off the swamp's eastern border

and possibly branching off
in two separate directions.

Uh, we're right where

tom's field is,

right behind the barn.

It's at that juncture where

the road seems to, uh, separate.

- Right.
- Rick: There appears to be

a... What miriam and aaron
both say is a foundation.

What's curious about it
is... And this is the hope...

There are voids
between the rocks.

You can actually reach your hand,
most of your forearm in.

- Oh, really? - Wow.

- Rick: There's a big hole.
- Miriam: Oh, yeah.

Rick: You can put
your hand right in there.

Narrator: One day ago,
while investigating

several of these small voids,

the team speculated
that they may be evidence

of a possible substructure.

It's a stone foundation,

and we now have
two right angles.

The feature's about two feet high,
give or take.

How much soil was covering it?

Three feet, craig.

Just seems like a lot of, uh,
material to be covering it.

You know, the more material,
the older it is.

I'm going to let steve tell you
what his thoughts are, but, uh,

- it's certainly not the road.
- Steve g.: Mm-hmm.

So,
I've come across numerous amounts

of foundations from the
and 's in nova scotia.

And, uh, coming up on this,

that's the first thing to cross my mind,
and I said,

you know,
we're near anthony graves,

where his house and
foundation and property.

And there are stories that
anthony graves had found

a treasure or cache of some sort

because of the coins
he was spending.

And what are the chances that

he could have stored maybe
his treasure under a foundation?

Narrator: One persistent rumor
about a possible treasure discovery

on oak island

revolves around a farmer
named anthony graves

who purchased most
of the island in .

Although never known
to have participated

in organized treasure hunts,

many locals reported
that mr. Graves

occasionally purchased
goods on the mainland

using spanish
silver and gold coins

after he began
living on the island.

Look, graves spent spanish coin.

That's irrefutable, and...

Back then,
when graves was alive,

there were no banks.

You trusted putting
your treasure

where you deemed it to be safe.

Well, you wouldn't put it
in your principal residence

because that's where
people would look.

- Yes. - Rick: If I had

a sum of money, coin,

I would put it in a rock wall,

or I would put it in the
floor of a foundation.

We know there are voids
down between these rocks,

and I would love
nothing better than

to probe deeper into it.

It's certainly interesting.

We were chasing the road,
and we come upon this.

So, interesting enough
to continue to pursue it,

that's for sure,
and we'll-we'll figure out

a way to get at that target.

That's really cool. You know,

and the road is still an enigma.

It will lead us where it wants to lead us,
so... All right.

Well, good. That's excellent.
That's exciting, guys.

We'll get to the bottom
of it. No pun intended.

All right. Good deal. Thanks,
guys. Appreciate it.

Rick: All right, see you.

- Take care.
- Craig: Talk to you later.

Narrator: Later that morning,
near the swamp...

Miriam: How is the
stone throwing going?

David f.: Uh, so far so good.

Narrator: Archeologist
miriam amirault

and rick and marty's nephew,
david fornetti,

continue investigating the
mysterious stone foundation

for additional clues.

Miriam: Nothing popping out?

No. I mean,
it looks like it's deeper,

but I don't know if
that's normal or not.

Okay.

Miriam: At the beginning
of the excavation,

we were finding these
voids between the stones.

It's almost like the
stones were all stacked

on top of each other,
and then soil was placed on the top,

and then it didn't
fall into these holes,

and so it's
obviously not natural.

You would never find
something like that just in nature.

What it is,
I think we're all still kind of baffled,

but after we remove the stones

that will help us figure
out what it actually is.

David f.: What does
this look like to you?

Is that charcoal or is that...

More like a burn area?

Miriam: Looks like it to me.

This is how we check.

Yes. See how smudgy that is?

- David f.: Yeah. - Charcoal.

Narrator: Charcoal discovered
in the stone foundation?

Could it offer a valuable clue

as to how old this
structure might be?

- Aaron! - Aaron: Yeah?

Can you come
over here for a bit?

Hey, guys.

Look how big that
charcoal feature is.

Aaron: Wow.

Huh. I was not expecting that.

(chuckles) that's super cool.

Wow. Okay.

Miriam: (chuckles) it's
pretty much at the level

that the till would be on.

Aaron: It's interesting
how it's running.

- Miriam: Mm-hmm.
- David f.: Linear. - Yeah.

Like, this is almost like a corner,
you got this big stone,

- and above it a big stone.
- Miriam: Mm-hmm.

Aaron: You know,
and in that area, you got the fire.

And then look
at how red this is.

- Miriam: Yeah.
- Aaron: And that's indication

that it's been a hot fire there.

David f.: Have you seen
something like this before?

Yeah. This would indicate
that this is the result

of the structure burning down

or that this might be
some sort of hearth feature,

where it had continuous burning.

You can just see by
the redness of the soil

and the depth of the charcoal.

- Miriam: Yup.
- Narrator: A hearth feature

or a structure made for the
purpose of continuous burning?

Could david fornetti
possibly have found evidence

linking this feature to similar
discoveries made this year,

like the pine tar kiln

located on nearby lot ,

which archaeologist laird
niven believes may be

connected to the construction
of the original money pit?

I was not expecting to see that.

- Miriam: Yeah.
- I think I would excavate that

as a separate feature,
take a sample, bag it, and then take

everything right down to till.

All right. I'll let you
guys continue on.

- Okay.
- David f.: All right. Well, I'll keep pulling this down to till,

- and I'll let you... - Yeah.

- Excavate that charcoal.
- I'll get a bag right now.

Aaron: All right.

Well, let's get back to it.

Narrator: While aaron,
david and miriam

continue investigating
the mysterious structure...

Gary: That's some big rocks.

Narrator: Approximately
yards to the south,

project manager scott barlow,

metal detection
expert gary drayton,

and heavy equipment
operator billy gerhardt,

are searching the stone
pathway for valuable artifacts

or any evidence that
could offer a definitive date

as to when the
feature was created.

- Getting anything up there, gary?
- Gary: Not yet, mate.

Couple little, small,
scrappy nail signals. That's it.

Once we start getting down to depth,
though,

we have a chance of
finding something good.

This is the same road?

This is the road,
but we may be coming near

its destination, right?

Marty: The data is a
little bit all over the board

on this road or path.

But some of the oldest stuff
appears to date into the s.

And, remember,
with the younger things

on top of older things,
that's its youngest possible age,

not its correct age.

The road could've been
there for a thousand years.

You have to get the artifacts
in the succession of layers

to figure out how
old that thing is.

It'd be nice to find
another ringbolt

or some really old ox shoes.

Or, even better,
some of the stuff

that they were
hauling along this track.

Hey, a gold coin would be nice.

- Oh, would it. - (chuckles)

we'll see.

Scott: I want something
that we can say,

- "who did it?" - gary: Yep.

Yeah. Another foot
stone or something like that

- would be good.
- Scott: That'd be great.

♪ ♪

is the cobble road there?

Scott: It's starting to get
a little cobbly here now.

He's getting down to that level.

Pretty hard, isn't it?

There's lots of stones in here,
like,

there, there, there. Oh, wow.

There's something here.

Not sure if it was buried
here or if it was in place

- when they laid the stones.
- Well, that's totally out of place.

What is it doing here?

-Scott: It'sn not cut -yeah.

It looks like a branch,
doesn't it?

Scott: A tree root or something.

Where's the rest of it?

- It was right up against the rock.
- Billy: Yeah. Exactly.

I'd say it is cut,
because the rest...

It should go down to a small piece,
right?

-Gary: Yeah.
-Scott: That's it there. The stump should be

right by my knee.

Then it suggests that it may be placed,
right?

- Yeah. - Billy: People laid

the sticks down and
threw the rocks on top.

Gary: Exactly right, mate.

And then treasure
run over the top of it.

(chuckles)

- hey, scott.
- Scott: Hey, aaron.

Aaron: You guys
have moved a bit of dirt.

Well,
we're trying to chase this along here.

How's it looking?

Scott: Right here we
got a lot of cobbles.

You can see it. Then this.

We took it out. It
was in amongst,

almost as if the rocks
were placed within it.

- Aaron: Yeah.
- You know, the stump wasn't there.

Uh,
there was rocks on top of part of it,

so maybe we can do c- on it,

and we can get an age.

- Yeah. - Marty: Look at that!

- That's cut.
- Narrator: Three weeks ago,

the team discovered a
number of wooden survey stakes

bordering the pathway
that were dated

to as early as .

However,
since these newly discovered wood pieces

were found beneath the pathway,

meaning that they were
most likely placed there

when the structure was built,

could testing them reveal

a more precise
age of the feature?

That's the sort of
stuff we're looking for.

Trying to make a
connection between this

and the stone feature

we just found, um,
and have excavated.

And more and more we're digging,
we're finding

similar building techniques,

and when you add up
all these small little pieces

it makes a compelling argument
that the two are connected.

What's interesting about
wood going under stone...

Wood can't
naturally lodge itself

under, uh, a bunch of stones.

So these were
intentionally placed,

possibly as a cribbing
method to keep the stones

from sinking to the
bottom through the mud.

So when you add all
these little things together,

that gives us a
more confident date

on when this was constructed.

Just one more
piece of the puzzle.

- One more little piece.
- We find enough pieces,

- we'll be able to put the puzzle together.
- Yeah. Hopefully.

But this is... This
is looking great,

and, uh,
I'll let you guys get back at it.

- All right. Thank you.
- Thank you.

Narrator: While
members of the team

continue investigating
near the swamp...

In the money pit area...

Steve g.: So,
change of game plan

- just a little bit.
- Terry: Okay.

Narrator: Steve guptill
meets with oak island historian

charles barkhouse and
geologist terry matheson

to update them
on new instructions

from rick, marty and craig

regarding the team's
core drilling operation.

We've had a lot of success

with consistent
wood hits in this area

in the to range
plus or minus a foot.

- Yup.
- Steve g.: What we want to do is head back east a little bit,

so what we're going to do is
we're going to punch a hole

-at cd- , the hole I just set mike up over.
-Good.

Steve g.: We're looking for
the eastern edge of the tunnel

- or hopefully in the center of the money pit.
- Okay.

- Cd- . - Cd- .

- Charles: Cd- .
- Terry: Okay. I'm in.

- Steve g.: We're looking for the tunnel.
- Charles: The tunnel.

Bingo!

Terry: This is the top of a tunnel,
not maybe.

So it comes from somewhere,
and it goes to somewhere.

Narrator: Over the
past several weeks,

the oak island team
has drilled six boreholes

in the vicinity of the c- shaft

on the western side
of the money pit area,

and in each case encountered

what appears to
be a wooden tunnel

between and feet deep.

Now, it is rick,
marty and craig's hope that,

by moving some feet eastward

to a borehole on their
refined grid known as cd- ,

they will once again
obtain more evidence

of this mysterious tunnel

and hopefully be another
step closer to locating

the original money pit and
the fabled treasure vault.

I'm very interested

in the progress we're
making in the money pit.

We've intersected
a tunnel or tunnels,

but we don't know the
direction in which they're headed,

so we're following that,
basically.

It's like a hound on a scent.

You pick up a scent,
you need to follow it.

In this case,
the prey is the money pit.

This one going up.

- Charles: feet.
- Terry: All right.

(grunts)

narrator: Although the
coring drill has yet to reach

the target depth of feet,

geologist terry matheson
is ready to begin looking

for any indications of backfill

or human activity from
possible treasure depositors.

- So, terry, this is in situ material?
- Terry: Yep.

Blue-gray till that
hasn't been disturbed

in a very long time.

Something's wrong there.

It looks in situ,
but it's relatively loose.

And that looks like
it might be disturbed.

It's borderline. It's definitely till,
but it could be backfill.

We could be close to something.

Narrator: Disturbed
backfill material?

Could the team have
just located evidence

of human activity?

And, if so,
is it from prior searchers?

Or perhaps someone who
came to oak island much earlier?

The clues are adding up,

and I'm never sick and
tired of a clue being found.

That's what this is all about.
I've referenced it before:

This is a thousand-piece puzzle,
you know?

Every piece counts,

so we need to stay the course.

Terry: We've got a shaft here.

And maybe, maybe,
it's the money pit.

Narrator: The
following morning...

Ian: So here we are.

Narrator: As the core
drilling operation continues

in the money pit area,

rick lagina has invited
geoscientist dr. Ian spooner

to join archeologists
dr. Aaron taylor

and miriam amirault

for a further examination

of the mysterious stone feature

near the northeastern
border of the swamp.

Aaron: So, this was all covered

in-in charcoal.

- Right.
- Aaron: And you can see in that

- profile wall the depth of it.
- Ian: Right. I can see that.

- Mm-hmm.
- And we get that orangey color soil.

Ian: Indication
of all the oxidation

that's taking place
because of all the heat.

- Yeah. - Ian: It's very common

with any kind of fire, right?

But this amount of
burning here is pretty...

- Pretty intense. - Aaron: Yeah.

And these stones here,

you know,
they look intentionally placed.

- Ian: Yes.
- Aaron: They don't look rubbly to me.

Ian: No. I'm starting
to think of that as,

if you have that road,
and all the coal,

if you have major
burning here...

I mean,
maybe it speaks to industrial activity.

I can't even imagine the amount
of work put in and to what end?

Miriam: Well, it's just,
like, with the depth

that we are finding
in this burn feature,

it's been b*rned multiple times.

What were they burning,
why was it b*rned so much,

and where is any
evidence of that?

That's what's confusing us.

There is nothing in this.

- Yeah.
- This couldn't be one single burn event?

- Not with that. No.
- Not with that depth.

You can see it
in the profile wall.

It's similar to what we were
getting up at the pine tar kiln.

Narrator: Is it possible that,

like the pine
tar kiln on lot ,

which may date to the th
century and be connected

to the construction of
the original money pit,

this stone feature might
have been used by someone

who came to oak island long
before th-century settlers?

If so, what was it used for?

And could it be connected
to the mysterious wealth

of previous landowners
like anthony graves?

Or, for that matter,
samuel ball?

It doesn't necessarily
have to be a campsite.

It could be a workplace.

It could be an area
where work was done

in association with, perhaps,
the eye of the swamp.

There's all kinds
of variables here,

and so we need to take a very slow,
methodical approach

and give the archeologists
time to put this story together.

We say this over and over again,

but I think it is
worth repeating.

No artifacts here.

It's interesting and
perplexing because

of all my experiences,
anything like this...

Anything... You're
finding artifacts.

- Ian: Right.
- And in large quantities.

Right.

It seems like everything
that we've excavated,

there's like a secretive
component to it.

It's almost eerie

that there's so little.

Maybe there is a swamp
story and a money pit story.

- Yeah.
- Aaron: I don't believe there's

two parallel stories here.

I think there's one story,
and they're connected.

There's too much going on here

for it to be some
other parallel story.

Like,
what would possess people to do

what they've done here,
this path,

unless it was for some
real important purpose?

Rick: The swamp seems
to be telling us some things

which we had previously
no knowledge of.

My concern is simply this:

Is there a unique swamp story

and a unique money pit
story or are they connected?

Why not go directly
towards the money pit

if it is in association
with that?

I don't know,
but that's the point

of this whole exercise.

Ian: So,
I'm going to clean off this face.

- I'm going to get some soil samples.
- Yep.

- Okay.
- All right. Sounds good.

- Rick: Thank you, everybody.
- Ian: Yep.

Narrator: While the investigation
of the stone foundation

located near the pathway
in the swamp continues,

in the money pit area...

Terry: Alley-oop.

Narrator: Charles
barkhouse and terry matheson

are making timely progress

in the drilling operation
of borehole cd-

as they have nearly reached
their target depth of feet.

Terry: Unbroken...

Complete section
of maroon-ish till.

You know what we're not seeing?

- Spendables? - Charles: No.

We're not seeing
that - level

- where we see wood. - No.

- . - Charles: Yep.

Terry: ish...

- We should see it right about there.
- Yeah.

Terry: A little too continuous,
and not really any wood

that we were hoping to run into.

There's the end of it.

feet and nothing to report.

Narrator: Unfortunately
for the team,

their hope that borehole cd-

might offer the breakthrough
they have been working for

this year has
failed to be realized.

Is it possible that the drill
rod just missed its target?

Or has the team now
lost track of the tunnel

they've been tracing some
feet deep underground?

With the harsh winter
months now fast approaching,

they will have to
reassess their strategy

on how best to move
forward in their quest

to locate the fabled
treasure vault.

- Charles: The clock is ticking.
- Terry: We're running out of time.

- Exactly. - Pretty uneventful

going on here, charles.

We haven't been able
to intersect the tunnel.

Charles: It's down there, terry.

Terry: We just haven't found it yet,
charles.

Narrator: Later
that afternoon...

Gary: Here we are, mate.

Narrator: Over on lot ...

Gary: This used to be
owned by samuel ball,

and it was farmland
back in the day.

Narrator: Metal detection
expert gary drayton

along with treasure
hunter michael john

are investigating an
area near the foundation

that once belonged
to samuel ball.

They are hoping
to find more clues

as to why the th-century
oak island landowner

mysteriously came to be
one of the wealthiest men

in the province of nova scotia.

Gary: What I've done,
since we have cleared out

the surface artifacts,
I've brought the big mama jama.

There you go.

Gary: It's a little bit of

- a bigger coil. - Yes.

What's the maximum
depth for this one?

Like a cannonball-size target?

About six, seven feet.

- Okay, wow. - Gary: This area

is now cleared of trees

and scrubs and bulrushes.

Gives me an opportunity
to run the gpx

with a -inch coil.

We're looking for deep targets.

Okay, mate. This is a
good little clearing to start.

Yeah. Okay.

I want to go in these
wide-open spaces.

- Hopefully we find something.
- All right.

Gary: Okay. We are
ready to rock and roll.

Michael j.: All righty.

Marty: Other than the interest
in samuel ball, the human being,

there is a little bit of a
glimmer that he was...

A little bit more
than meets the eye.

I don't think there's any
way anybody that smart,

that aware of things,

wouldn't have known exactly
what was going on oak island

the whole time he was there.

The more I can find out about this person,
uh, the better.

(beeping)

- that was a small piece of iron.
- Small piece?

Gary: Yep.

(beeping)

gary: Come on. Where are you?

- (beeps loudly) - oh.

Whoa.

(laughs) look at that.

- A very strong signal.
- Michael j.: Yeah.

- Gary: Looks like it's just here, mate.
- Michael j.: Okay.

♪ ♪

- michael j.: Check?
- Gary: Yep.

(buzzing)

see? I should be able to hit it.

Gary: That should be
something good. It's deep.

So it should be old.

Oh. What we got here?

- Gary: That's it. Yeah.
- That's probably it, yes.

That is...

Oh, a little baby ox shoe.

- (michael j. Chuckles) -
we found the shack daddy,

- the mother of all ox shoes...
- Yeah.

- Yeah. - Uh, near the swamp.

And now we've
found a little baby one.

That is a small little ox shoe.

Now we've pulled up
several different ox shoes

in really good condition.

And if there is some
kind of industrial operation,

you're going to need
beasts of burden

to transport whatever
you was doing there.

And when we show
these to carmen,

hopefully carmen will
give us a country of origin.

It is an oldie. This
is an old artifact.

I've just never seen
them this small.

What a nice little artifact,
and I'm looking forward

to taking this to
carmen legge...

- There we go, yeah.
- To give us a story behind this.

Hey, great find,
michael. Great find.

We've got to tell
the archeologists

- about this area.
- Michael j.: That's right. Yeah.

- Narrator: The following morning...
- Marty: What's going on?

What's today's issue?

Narrator: Marty lagina
meets with his partner

craig tester and jack begley

to discuss the
team's current setback

in the money pit area

and to decide how
best to prioritize

the use of the core drilling rig


with just a few precious
weeks remaining

before the onset of winter.

So, we're chasing the money pit

- towards c . - Marty: Mm-hmm.

Craig: And, uh,
the most recent one we drilled was cd- .

It's not on the map yet,
but it's right here.

- Marty: Yep.
- A-and we didn't find the tunnel there.

So,
that didn't work. What do you want to do?

Well, the question is:

Do we continue following
these tunnels that

we're finding because, you know,
we're running out of time.

Do we have any other options?

Anywhere else to move that rig?

We have the barringer anomalies.

- The nonferrous anomalies?
- The nonferrous ones.

- Yeah.
- Jack: Can we go after one of those?

I would.

Narrator: Earlier this year,
while searching through the files

of rick, marty and craig's
late partner dan blankenship,

oak island historian
doug crowell

discovered a -year-old survey

that had been conducted by a
company known as barringer.

A survey that used
low-frequency radio waves

which identified four
targets some feet deep

in and around smith's cove
that were nonferrous in nature,

meaning they could be
composed of silver or gold.

Because the covid- pandemic

delayed the start of their
drilling operation this year

by nearly two months,
the laginas and craig

had planned to focus their
efforts on trying to locate

the original money pit.

However, now that they have hit

an unfortunate setback
there and with only a few

precious weeks remaining
before the onset of winter,

perhaps investigating the
targets on the barringer survey

could lead to a
significant discovery.

The barringer survey has not one,
two, three,

but four nonferrous
targets delineated.

It's a vlf survey:
Very low frequencies.

And it was never followed up on.

I-it's sort of
risk-reward ratio.

If it hits,
it would turn everything.

- Jack: Mm-hmm.
- You know, if there's gold or silver at that location,

it would change everything.

Yeah.

There is certainly some belief

that the barringer
survey was accurate.

That is supported by
some inferential data.

In the money pit,
we found an area

that may have been interpreted

by the barringer
survey as a tunnel.

I think there's
some value in it.

And it's interesting
enough to follow up on.

I'd go do the barringer thing.

What the hell?
Let's have a go at it.

Yeah, I have no problem
going to the barringer survey.

We're not giving up on these.

- It's a time issue.
- There's so much more to do here.

- So that's where I'm at.
- Okay. I'll go meet up with rick.

- See you out there in a little while.
- Yep.

- Jack: Let's find some gold.
- Marty: Let's do it.

Narrator: Later that afternoon,

jack begley and
charles barkhouse

have traveled some
miles north of oak island

to centerville, nova scotia

where they have arranged to meet

with blacksmithing
expert carmen legge

to have him examine the
artifact found one day ago

on the property once
belonging to samuel ball.

- Jack: Hey, carmen! - Well, hello.
- Charles: Hey, carmen.

Carmen: What do you got today?

Jack: Well, this is from lot .

It was found metal detecting.

Let's see if you
can identify this.

- Oh, a little fella. - Yeah.

Carmen: Very nice.

Well,
this is a... The hind shoe off an ox.

- Right.
- Carmen: The front cork

and the back cork
are fairly parallel.

With the narrow cork
on the back it means

it was scottish that did this.

- Really? - Yes.

Do you have any idea
what a date on that might be?

Carmen: Uh, I would say

- to s. - Wow.

Jack: This would have been
made before samuel ball.

Yeah.

Narrator: A scottish ox shoe?

Possibly dating over a
century prior to the arrival

of samuel ball and the
discovery of the money pit?

Is it possible that this ox

was used to haul valuable
cargo across the island,

and, if so,
how were the scottish involved?

Uh, just trying to figure out
why the scottish would be there.

There's a theory that the
scottish may have buried

uh, a treasure on oak island.

James: So here's the
theory in a nutshell:

Followers of a group
of scottish knights

settled in nova scotia
during the early s.

Narrator: One week ago,
author and historian

james mcquiston shared
an incredible theory

that the oak island
treasure might be connected

to a th-century scottish order

known as the knights baronets,
an organization

with strong ties to
both the freemasons

and their predecessors,
the knights templar.

James: Unfortunately, the french

att*cked nova scotia,

leaving the scots ousted
in the spring of ,

and I believe they took
shelter in mahone bay

and buried the
oak island treasure.

That's remarkable.

Narrator: Is it possible that the
team has now found evidence

that could corroborate
that treasure theory?

And on property that once
belonged to samuel ball?

And the time frame for that is?

Charles: Uh,
right around that time frame.

- Carmen: Is that right? - Yeah.

We're coming up with so
much different information

of people all over europe,
at least,

having some sort of
a stop on oak island.

Not just around the money pit,
either.

Given the date, as far as we know,
there was nobody living

on oak island at that time.

So, to me,
that says a lot. It really does.

We've dug up a lot of ox shoes
on the island over the years.

These guys were not just
settlers that were making

these ox shoes,
so there's a lot of activity

going on the island.

This could be
from the depositors.

We keep bringing you iron.

Hopefully,
we can bring you some precious metals.

Oh,
wouldn't that be nice? Yes. Yes.

- Make sure you bring it here first.
- Okay.

- Charles: Thank you, carmen.
- Carmen: Very good, see you.

- Charles: Bye now.
- Carmen: Oh, yeah.

Narrator: As the team
from choice sonic drilling

repositions their
rig at smith's cove

in preparation to
drill in search of

one of the nonferrous targets

identified on the
barringer survey...

Miriam: Oh, wow.

Hey, aaron!

Do you want to
come check this out?

Narrator: In the uplands
near the northeastern border

of the oak island swamp,

archeologists miriam
amirault and dr. Aaron taylor

continue to search for more
evidence that might tell them

which direction the mysterious
stone pathway is heading.

- Aaron: Ooh, what do you got?
- Look what I just found.

Aaron: Oh, nice.

Hand-painted.

Miriam: I haven't
seen colors like that.

Aaron: Yeah.

- Blue, pink, and green.
- That's great. Wow.

Narrator: Hand-painted pottery?

Discovered near the
pathway in the uplands?

Was it left behind by someone

after the discovery of
the money pit in ?

Or is it evidence of much
earlier human activity

- on oak island?
- Miriam: It's almost, like, uh,

a base of maybe a teacup
or something? Or a bowl?

- Do you see that base? - Yeah.

- Rick: Hey. Good morning.
- Aaron: Hey, rick.

- Miriam: Hi. - Hey.

- Miriam just had an interesting find.
- Look what I just found.

Oh. In the black or in the...?

Yeah.

Here you go.

Rick: What do you make of it?

- Aaron: That's hand-painted.
- Miriam: Hand-painted.

- Isn't it pretty?
- It's very pretty.

The thing about doing
the archeological work

with aaron and miriam is
that you learn to pay attention.

You learn that the
most insignificant find

might be highly revealing.

This is what
archeology is about.

Finding artifacts,
studying them, dating them,

and then weaving them
into an understanding...

A "story,"
if you will... Of what happened.

This is certainly quite unique.

Aaron: What the
ceramics do tell us

is that this was exposed

when those ceramics

- came down on it.
- Miriam: Yeah. - Rick: Right.

But right now, the question is:

Does this connect to the road?

I mean, is it believable to
think that this is all man-made?

Well, we know parts of it
are definitely man-made.

- In here is definitely man-made.
- Rick: Right.

I think it's-it's stronger
that it moves upland

at some point,
and the road connects to there,

it's coming along here,
stops, and turns up here.

And that's why I want
to see if billy is available

to take another
bucket-width back

to see if this is something.

So, for right now,
I'll talk to billy about digging this

- and digging that. Okay.
- Great.

- All right. - Thanks, rick.
- All right, thank you.

- Rick: Good find, miriam.
- Yeah, it's exciting.

Aaron and miriam have decided

that they're going to take
basically a leap of faith.

This road has to go somewhere,

and there are significant clues

that have led them to believe
that the road has turned upland.

And, thus,
they've chosen to open up

some test pits
around the stone path.

The hope is that we can follow
it in some way, shape, or form.

Billy,
if you would be able to pull back this area

then maybe we can see if the road's,
uh, coming up there.

Billy: Okay.

That's the perfect depth, billy.

♪ ♪

that's great,
billy. That's perfect.

I think this is good
for now. Thank you.

- Okay. - Aaron: So we can

get in here with our
shovels and trowels.

If maybe just we can get
that little blob out of there?

- I'll get that with a shovel.
- Yup.

Rick: What's that?

Did you see this?

- There's stone here.
- Aaron: Wow.

Miriam: I'd say
that's exactly what

- we're looking for. - Yeah.

Narrator: Evidence
of more cobblestones?

Could dr. Aaron taylor's
intuition have paid off

with the discovery of another
section of the stone pathway

leading further into the uplands,
away from the swamp?

If so, just where is it leading?

And what will the team
find when they reach its end?

The stones are here,
and then they stop.

I'm thinking that's
telling me the road is

probably stopping here,

and coming up this way.

The path appears to have

turned to the
upland at this point.

And all the
treasure-associated thoughts

around oak island,

are, of course,
based in the money pit.

Well, we're certainly headed
in that direction, and so

I have every reason to hope

that we're following
the right path.

Do you want me
to shovel this out?

Yes, please. (laughs)

- rick: Okay. - Miriam: Yeah.

Narrator: Later
that afternoon...

We all recognize the amount
of work that we've done

trying to uncover
the stone pathway.

Narrator: Rick,
marty and their partner craig tester

have gathered members
of their team in the w*r room

for a highly anticipated
scientific report

regarding the hand-cut
wood recently found

beneath the mysterious
stone pathway.

I believe craig has
a c- test result,

so, craig, fill us in.

Well, this sample came from,

uh, right before fred's road.

We found this piece of
wood underneath the rocks.

It was obvious it was,
uh, in place

when the road was put in place there,
the pathway.

And, uh,
we got two different time periods,

but, really,
they're so close together,

basically one time period:

From to .

- Wow. - Oh, wow.

Great!

Craig reveals these dates of,
uh, to .

Those are stunning, uh,
there's no question about it,

but they do fit.

I've always
believed that the road

was quite a bit older than,
uh, the s,

and here we have
dates that support that.

Look,
that is a very exciting date range.

Okay? That's a
fabulous date range.

That's really cool.

But is this a shaped
piece of wood

or a twig or something?

It was like a branch,
a small branch.

- You feel good about that?
- Yeah.

Marty: Great. Fantastic.

But I think the
dates that come from

organics under the
road are more telling than

the artifacts found on it,
because once that road is built

- it could have been used for hundreds of years.
- Yeah.

Alex: This is a great one.

It's good for the theory
the road might be quite old.

If we keep getting
these numbers,

then it becomes more
and more conclusive.

Miriam: And that's
basically what we do.

If we find an artifact
that seems completely

out of the ordinary,
but then we find more with those dates,

that's how we conclusively say,

"yes, this is... This is right."

I-I'll just reference
fred nolan:

"duplication,
duplication, duplication."

- marty: Yeah.
- Craig: Yep. Absolutely.

I'll tell you what those
results mean to me.

They mean that
this thing is real.

Somehow, this thing is real,

and remember
who you're talking to.

For the longest time,
my number one theory of what happened

on oak island was
nothing of significance

prior to .

We've already proved
that's not the case.

That makes me
enthused to keep going.

We haven't solved this
yet and we're going to.

That is an extremely

intriguing and exciting range.

- I agree. It's exciting.
- Marty: Yeah.

- Absolutely.
- Marty: Carry on, guys.

Hope the weather holds for you.

- Rick: Take care.
- Doug: Take care.

Narrator: As another
week comes to a close

for rick, marty,
craig and their team,

despite a frustrating
setback in the money pit,

there is new hope that
a breakthrough discovery

may still be within their
reach at smith's cove.

And new revelations at the swamp

provide strong encouragement
that they are getting

closer and closer to unraveling

the -year-old
treasure mystery.

But as they
continue to research,

drill and dig,

will they ultimately reveal

that the carefully-hidden
truth about oak island

revolves around one story?

Or a number of them?

Whatever the case may be,

their story could re-write
north american history

as we know it.

Next time on the
curse of oak island...

Gary: I love the smell of
treasure in the morning.

Oh, look at that!

I would say this looks m*llitary.

This particular artifact
was found in the swamp,

and I've never seen
anything like that.

Marty: Wow. What
the hell is that?

We are hoping you might
have an idea of what it is.

Well, this is really,
really old.

- Middle s. - Jack: Oh, wow.

Scott: What do you got?

Looks like a piece
of finished wood.

It looks like railing. It
looks like ship's railing.

- Steve g.: It was on the ship in the swamp.
- Billy: Yeah.
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