The Curse of Oak Island

The Curse of Oak Island: EARTH-SHATTERING DISCOVERY of 1700s Relic (Season 9)

The Curse of Oak Island: EARTH-SHATTERING DISCOVERY of 1700s Relic (Season 9)

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So if you want to try to track through there and here, you can have a go at metal detecting Rick Lagina along with members of the team.
Search for more clues near the stone road or possible ship’s wharf in the southeastern corner of the triangle-shaped swamp.

It is kind of amazing how the stone road seems to extend, let’s say, out into a stone dock, perhaps into the water.

Two weeks ago, Terry DeVoe, who serves as the president of the New England Antiquities Research Association, made an astonishing assessment of the feature.
This is a type of road that was built in Europe in the 1500s. Wow.

Last week, following Terry’s presentation, the team found not only pieces of wooden cargo barrels in this area, but also what could be part of a large sailing galleon.
We are engaged in a process in the southeast corner of the swamp. So, the way this is going to happen is Billy’s going to come in with the excavator.
Basically, we’re unzippering the land, we’re going to peel it back, open it up, and Gary will come in and metal detect, hopefully find some items.
Yeah, that is nice.

Hi, Gary. Hi, Miriam. What you got?
We’ve got some big shards of pottery here, and they’re all in this area, so I didn’t want to disturb them too much.
There’s a piece there.
Oh, and an old black glass.
It’s super bubbly, so when you find the bubbles, it means it’s older because the process of making it was not as refined.

Could archaeologist Miriam Amirou be correct?
Is this piece of black glass found near the stone road part of an ancient container?
And if so, will it be an important clue to help verify when the road was constructed?

Yeah, we’re hitting them overload here. Let’s be fun piecing it together.
Yeah, 1700’s written all over it. You’d have to find the neck and the rim.
Oh my goodness.

We have not found this many pieces of like one single artifact in all of the swamp, so this is really cool.
Gorgeous, and that’s nice.
This could easily be an English wine bottle.

We want the finish, the top, to be definitive about it, and it might be it. Yep.
Oh my gosh.
What do you have?
Nice, that’s exactly what we were looking for.
Yep, it’s a nice finish.
And that’s 1770s, 1780s, I’d say. Wow.
That is so cool.

An English wine bottle dating back as much as three decades before the discovery of the money pit.
Since the team has found a number of 18th-century British artifacts across the island in the past, could this bottle have been connected to a prior searcher operation on Oak Island, or was it left by someone who made a deposit?

So I guess this is a good area.
Yep, top pocket finds.

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