SEASON 11 IS HERE | TOP 3 BIGGEST & AMAZING FINDS FROM SEASON 10
SEASON 11 IS HERE | TOP 3 BIGGEST & AMAZING FINDS FROM SEASON 10
The new season is here. Legina’s brother will be back to start a new excavation session in November.
Ten years ago, we never would have anticipated going underground in The Money Pit. What we’re seeing is a high-density anomaly below the surface of The Money Pit.
Yep, will this be the most exciting historical season yet? The stage is set because the last three biggest finds from season 10 have already taken the world by storm. We need to get to the bottom of the garden shaft; it could be the opposite chamber that we seek.
For people across the globe, the belief that they will finally solve a 228-year-old treasure mystery has never been higher.
To start off, I am going to begin by analyzing the Lot Five barter token. A couple of months after Gary found the Roman coin with Rick, he and Jack Begley fared well once again with a curious non-ferrous target. But what did they find this time? A lead barter token!
It was most likely used as a form of currency several centuries ago, but it wasn’t made of silver or gold. Let me emphasize one thing here again: lead artifacts found on Oak Island have sometimes proven to be the greatest clues in helping to solve the mystery.
Meanwhile, when archaeometallurgist Emma Colligan analyzed the token, her initial take on its possible origin was more than compelling. But when chemist Dr. Chris McFarland conducted isotope testing on the lead, his laser-focused findings made for an unbelievable moment. According to my judgment and analysis, the object was relatively easy to identify because it was flat, a favorable characteristic for analysis, yet it wouldn’t have been a piece of cake because it had a very thick, altered crust on it, indicating that it had been submerged for quite some time. Without a doubt, it has endured significant environmental changes over the years.
Now hear this out: the biggest result is that isotopically it looks very similar to the Cross. No way! I wasn’t expecting that. The Lot Five token was an exact compositional match to the 14th-century lead cross, signifying that both originated from Southern France, a region where the Knights Templar maintained a stronghold until the early 1300s. The lead in the disc apparently matches virtually identically with the lead in the lead cross, which is a head-scratcher. Another very significant thing that could tie the Templars to this location is the discovery of the…
And then all those other W’s pieces are going to fall right into place.