The Curse of Oak Island

Guess What They Found During Final Excavation in Oak Island!

Guess What They Found During Final Excavation in Oak Island!

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Oak Island season 11 has leaked, and this thrillingly adventurous season is all you would want in a treasure hunt series. The season starts with the exploration of lot 5, located on the island’s west side. And not long after the exploration starts, treasures begin to reveal themselves, like the finding of five coins in this lot.

What other amazing secrets will be revealed this season? Are these findings just unique in their way or part of a puzzle leading to a bigger treasure? Join us as we delve into Oak Island season 11 best moments that have just been leaked.

Findings in lot 5.
Successful decades of treasure hunting with Rick, Marty, and the Lega Oak Island team have led to this moment. Season 11, episode 1 is called On the Money, and it starts intensely with thrillers like no other.

As the team explores Lot 5, the myth of Oak Island still found a way to surprise after decades of hunting. Lot 5 is the last plot to be explored, and some people believe it would bring little to the table since it needs infrastructure. However, the team, full of faith in the island’s ability, went ahead. Regardless of those disbelievers, they invented discovery methods and then began their expedition.

Four coins tied to the Knights Templar.
Not long after exploring lot 5, they came across four coins closely together. The amount of money that could fit into this little field is astonishing, and it calls for further investigation into how they arrived here. Some speculate that these coins are the remnants of an even more significant treasure horde associated with the Knights Templar.

In simpler terms, how can one come across even four coins at such a small distance? What does this hint at? The involvement with the Knight Temple still raises debates as the team speculates if something is more under their land. Though there’s convincing evidence by circumstances, conclusiveness still defies it. Well, something like that at least was spilt out to the public.

As they continued serving, Gary found a prehistoric lead barter token. The scalloped sides of this artifact have high historical value and are very similar to the Smith’s Cove lead cross discovered in 2017. These lead artifacts belong to civilizations as old as the 14th century. Indeed, this corresponds to the hypothesis that the Knights Templars, a medieval order known for its wealth and mysterious rituals, could have been connected to the mystery of Oak Island.

At first sight, the coins are ordinary, but scrutiny reveals an elaborately designed pattern, which may be made up of symbols and signs. Thus, this interesting finding led the group to consult an eminent numismatist, Sandy Campbell, to provide insight into these coins.

Sandies’s team with over 40 years of experience in ancient and scarce coin analysis is confident Sandies’s insights will solve the riddle that emanated at lot 5 earlier this week. It would not be easy to assume that chance led to this immense discovery of five coins for it would have been an intentional act or event. Knowing such issues, Sandy could know what is inside those coins.

Sandy’s team, consisting of experienced numismatists and researchers, also made many successful analyses for some obscure or complex types of coins. Together, they cover various numismatic areas like metallurgy, iconography, paleography, and provenence analyses. Such careful examination of the coin’s design, materials, and method of minting is sure to yield important insights regarding their provenence.

A keen inspection of any available historical documents or numismatic databases will be undertaken to establish if they hint at anything regarding their circulation characteristics and associations with particular civilizations or ages. The endgame of this team has been established. Finding where the coins have come from and knowing the history behind them.

Knowing where the coins come from and when they were used gives more insight into what they meant historically. Her understanding of ancient artifacts and the location where they were discovered would go a long way in answering the questions surrounding these coins. This would help unravel more information and clues to support their research as a team.

She may be able to crack the mystery behind the background of these coins and their importance. If she is keen on details and connecting disjointed bits of information, her competence combined with the knowledge of these numismatists can reveal the coin’s mystery.

Sandy studies the coin very closely and notices writing on it and some settings. She stops for a while and then admits that it’s an Indian coin produced between the 6th and 8th century AD. Furthermore, this discovery adds a different twist to an already puzzling assortment of coins.

A coin believed to have originated from India ends up in Oak Island among so many other coins from different parts of Europe. And this question is what leaves the team members puzzled. However, there is also English plunder, Spanish treasure, and even Chinese gold, which makes the riddle more complex.

Amidst this financial chaos, Sandy makes a groundbreaking discovery. A small piece of gold hidden in one of the coins. Intricate designs inscribed onto its surface authenticate its realness as a Roman blaze. The discovery adds another Roman coin to the collection, thus doubling the team’s fortune.

Upon looking at the new coin, they see the face of a man with a pointed chin and a curious nose. They turn the coin and find it has two figures in an embrace, which could be dated before BC. Sandy, without any doubt, professes that this is the biggest coin ever found at Oak Island.

The mysterious Oak Island.
A tiny island located along the Nova Scotia shore, Oak Island has fascinated the minds of treasure seekers and history lovers for centuries. The island’s beauty comes from the combination of interesting hints such as the money pit, a deep hole people believe is loaded with gold. In this maze of mystery, the finding of three Roman coins in lot 5 has given rise to further suspense.

The investigation at Oak Island has indeed been greatly influenced by these ancient artifacts that are thought to have been manufactured more than 2,000 years ago.

Mysterious metallic object.
Following identifying the strange redear in lot 5, the archaeologists employed a metal detector to hunt for hidden relics within the same local. Within no time, they find a huge metallic device buried within the hard earth. And Marty Lginina thinks it may have been part of a seller metal lid. Hence, the team conjectures excitedly that whichever door this object might have originated could have housed the money pit.

A metal artifact is taken to the interpretive center and an archometallergy, Emma Culligan, uses CT scanning to determine the object’s shape below the hardened earth. Lared Nan uses imaging to determine that it is simply a river spike despite noting that functionally one could use it for anything needed. As such, its lack of manganese leads them to believe that it is pre-1840s in origin.

Previously, Nan had studied some artifacts from the birthplace of the English treasure hunter, Sir William Fipps, at the heart of another of the major Oak Island theories. Fipps is said to have buried the Oak Island treasure in plain English after robbing a wrecked Spanish gallion. Nan and Culligan claim that though the river spike does not fit something else found during previous digs, it closely matches their findings at Fipps’s place of birth.

Hidden tunnel.
The joy of discovery was amplified by the sonic drills that passed on the 10th foot of the soft zone. This finding coincided with prior sonar readings and ignited a flame in their hearts that the treasure they had searched for over such a long period was now in their hands.

Meanwhile, others, including geologist Terry Mat, carried out the first sonic drilling operation of the year near what they called the garden shaft, while some archaeological teams continued digging the depression at lot 5. Initial promising results are yielded by a bore hole which is specifically referred to as B5N13. They go down to a depth of 109 ft where they get clues about a so-called soft area, a part of the earth composed of semi molten substances.

Historian Charles Barkhouse together with an excited Alec Lajina states that the presence of such a place means that the original money pit and probably the fallen cave is just close by to the wreckage.

B5N13 Charles and Steven Guptal, a surveyor quickly note that only 9 mi east of the location where valuable metals were discovered. Luckily, a recovery from 36 m made up of nothing other than more limestone and hard shell seems to blow away any hopes that their first bore hole was actually at an advantageous spot.

However, they discovered earth extracted from a DN12 bore hole number in the treasure zone at about 97.5 ft, proving the collapse of a chamber down there. The team found yet another mind-boggling finding in lot 5. A maze of interconnected tunnels crawling underground.

The convoluted passageway showed that some intelligent power had dug away underneath Oak Island. The dugout artifacts and buried trenches in different parts portrayed a scene of civilization that was gone with the blow and left an everlasting impression on the strange environment of the mysterious island.

In addition, Diverton Samson’s exploration in the sea revealed wood logs and blue decorated potteries. This information implies the existence of ancient shipwrecks or settlements that date back to a previous period and only adds to more questions concerning the history of Oak Island.

Halpern investigates the Knights Templar.
The medieval order famous for its riches, Halpern’s suggestion supports the possibility of a covert expedition by the Knights Templar to Oak Island carrying valuable treasures. It lends credibility to Halpern’s theories and suggests the possibility of a link between what Halpern calls the Templars’s treasure and the buried riches of Oak Island.

Interestingly, these coins are very well preserved, even if they were created about 2,000 years ago. Besides, Marty, an experienced Oak Island researcher, has noted some interesting commonalities to this effect concerning a particular territory of Portugal that is replete with ancient night ties.

These compelling pieces of evidence have added more intrigue to the unknown mystery of Oak Island. These Roman coins, coupled with Halpin’s findings and some related associations with the Knights Templar, can only lead this study towards the much needed solution.

Unusual red earthenware.
A few days after the New Year’s conference with all those who had been engaged in Oak Island research by the Lega brothers, the archaeologists headed by Lear Nan get to work around circular depressions on lot 5.

However, most man-made alterations found at the bush are believed to have been executed under the tenure of its last proprietor and caretaker, Robert Young. Although there are speculations that this may only be part of a multi-enturial endeavor.

During this search for a foundation wall suggesting that it was part of a prior man-made structure from a pre769 landlock lot division, archaeologists named Jaime Kuba and Fiona Steel discovered leftover red earthenware.

Redwear was pottery that served as an alternative to stone wear and was known to have been widely distributed in Europe and North America from the 17th to the 18th centuries. The strange purple black glaze of this shade of red wear found at the site strikes Naveen.

However, they noted that there were several pieces of coarse earthenware. So they immediately suspect early origin when they cannot identify its historical period. Later on, Nan will mention such utilitarian pottery which has hardly stayed the same for several centuries.

While on this question, they sought estimates as to how early the money pit was discovered. And Nan generally responded that the money pit might have been found in the 16th century, which could indicate that prospectors were already residing close to the area before the discovery of the, of course, Rick Laena was left mystified following this discovery.

Drowned debris.
At the same time, Jack Begley and Alex Lgina go with Tony Samson and Ken Dbor to investigate a body of water to the north where a man-made structure is hypothesized to have existed on Oak Island.

However, nothing discovered by Samson or Dbor will probably be recovered and examined, but all things that their eyes will behold may be considered as part of the application for an excavation permit to be requested later due to provincial regulations.

After searching the floor, Samson discovers many unidentified sunken objects. He can locate a 1-foot long handcarved plank of wood, which may indicate the existence of a dam, the shattered pieces of pottery bearing blue designs, the remains of a clay sailor’s pipe, and a thing that looks like a coin.

The questions present include whether the likeness of this debris to object of land may suggest a shipwreck incident within proximity or simply the possession by settlers who occupied the island just like the money pit.

Although many questions remain unanswered concerning this island enigma, the Lginina brothers are optimistic. They are sure that they will soon unlock the island’s mysteries and find treasure.

The new Curse of Oak Island season will be thrilling. It is also important that the Lega brothers have never been so close to resolving the Oak Island mystery and finding answers about its secrets.

Let’s hear your thoughts in the comments about what you expect the new season of Oak Island to bring below. Also, don’t forget to like this video and subscribe to the channel for more. See you soon.

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