Mysterious Treasure on Oak Island
Too much effort and money put into a project that is nothing more than a mystery/hunch/promise of a treasure.
No one confirmed IF anything is inside worth digging out.
No one confirmed IF anything is inside worth digging out.
SKEPTIC - One who instinctively or habitually doubts, questions, disagrees with assertions or generally accepted conclusions. And tries to prove these assertions/claims with scientific facts.


- Travvysavvy

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- Location: Southern California
elnorel wrote:Too much effort and money put into a project that is nothing more than a mystery/hunch/promise of a treasure.
No one confirmed IF anything is inside worth digging out.
I suppose that's why it's a mystery?
I dunno exploring for the sake of exploring is good enough for me
The True Sons of Liberty are alive and well.
Мое сердце, мой спаситель, да будет свет.

Мое сердце, мой спаситель, да будет свет.

Not if your money is at stake and you basically "gamble" based on those claims.
Put up your life savings and start digging.
I'm sure you consider that is wise. (not)
So you see, such venture is reckless and not thought through.
Let alone feasible since that is an island, you cant move heavy machinery there.
Well everything is possible. But.
Put up your life savings and start digging.
I'm sure you consider that is wise. (not)
So you see, such venture is reckless and not thought through.
Let alone feasible since that is an island, you cant move heavy machinery there.
Well everything is possible. But.
SKEPTIC - One who instinctively or habitually doubts, questions, disagrees with assertions or generally accepted conclusions. And tries to prove these assertions/claims with scientific facts.


- Travvysavvy

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- Posts: 961
- Joined: Thu Nov 04, 2010 7:18 am
- Location: Southern California
elnorel wrote:Not if your money is at stake and you basically "gamble" based on those claims.
Put up your life savings and start digging.
I'm sure you consider that is wise. (not)
So you see, such venture is reckless and not thought through.
Let alone feasible since that is an island, you cant move heavy machinery there.
Well everything is possible. But.
I guess I would donate come the chance..Some people have an insurmountable amount of that fiat paper
Also, I would if I didn't choose to have a wife and to help my family. I like exploring
The True Sons of Liberty are alive and well.
Мое сердце, мой спаситель, да будет свет.

Мое сердце, мой спаситель, да будет свет.

Yea I feel the same way, its in our genes.
But it would take millions of dollars and some tight connections to get the permit.
And I think they will keep us from ever finding out as they're with them (Freemasons).
But tides are turning, the license is granted to do more treasure hunting as it appears.
Read here.
Treasure hunt update - summer 2011
But it would take millions of dollars and some tight connections to get the permit.
And I think they will keep us from ever finding out as they're with them (Freemasons).
But tides are turning, the license is granted to do more treasure hunting as it appears.
Read here.
Treasure hunt update - summer 2011
SKEPTIC - One who instinctively or habitually doubts, questions, disagrees with assertions or generally accepted conclusions. And tries to prove these assertions/claims with scientific facts.


- Santaownsyou

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- Posts: 1003
- Joined: Thu Dec 24, 2009 6:49 am
Question is why hasn't some Canadian university's archeological department not funded a massive dig. It seems to me that's why those types of institutions exist in the first place is to gain knowledge on your countries biggest mysteries. At least that is the way it should be.
If it looks like a duck, acts like a duck, and quacks like a duck it is probably just a tool of the conspiracy.

- Freeyourmindnow

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santaownsyou wrote:Question is why hasn't some Canadian university's archeological department not funded a massive dig. It seems to me that's why those types of institutions exist in the first place is to gain knowledge on your countries biggest mysteries. At least that is the way it should be.
good question
maybe they did it in secret
Treasure hunters use electric pulses to probe Oak Island
By Sabrina Doyle, New Brunswick Telegraph-Journal August 22, 2011
SAINT JOHN, N.B. — In a renewed bid to uncover the elusive treasure believed by many to be buried deep within Oak Island off Nova Scotia's South Shore, a group of treasure hunters have used electrical currents in a bid to detect secret underground tunnels.
For the past six years, Rick Lagina and four others — including Dan Blankenship, whose lifetime dedication to the island is almost as legendary as the place itself — have been searching for the hidden treasure.
This summer, they put their hopes in technology.
On a hot, cloudless day in early July, in the middle of the island, they placed a device that miners, archeologists and environmentalists often use to map underground structures.
Powered by a car battery, the square, greyish-green box zapped 800-volt bursts of energy through attached cords to various points on the island, to depths sometimes the length of a football field.
The method, called electrical resistivity, pulsed electric currents through the earth and recorded how much each area repelled the charge.
Lagina said he hoped to pinpoint spots that were particularly resistant or unexpectedly conductive compared to their surroundings — anything out of the ordinary.
Lagina has been dreaming about the fabled Nova Scotia island ever since he was an 11-year-old living in Michigan. He read a magazine article about the 200-year-old search for the money pit some believe was buried on Oak Island by pirates.
Now 59 years old, Lagina is still dreaming.
After two weeks of gathering data, the team sent the numbers to a geological analyst in Montreal. Lagina said he got the results back three weeks ago.
When asked if there was anything interesting, he paused.
"There are interesting anomalies, yes," he said. He later added, "There are more than several sites that we are very excited about."
But the island has a well-documented history of thwarting discovery efforts, Lagina said.
While they were cutting through the brush to make way for their line grid, everything that could go wrong did, he said. The truck's engine blew, tools went missing, and the resistivity device itself stopped working more than once.
When they phoned the manufacturer in France, the woman on the line said, "'Can't happen, never happened, not in the history of the instrument. The unit is incapable of shutting down.'
"Five times it shut down," Lagina said.
Legend has it that the Oak Island treasure will not be found until seven humans have died trying to find it and all the oak trees on the island are gone. So far, the island's native umbrella oaks have all wilted away, and the treasure hunt has claimed six lives — none of them from Lagina's crew.
Ever since a teenage Daniel McGinnis came across a curious depression in the ground in 1795, there have been many excavations of the Money Pit — all of which have been fruitless except for the discovery of various booby traps and suggestive bits of metal.
Theories abound as to what might be hidden there, from pirate booty to knights Templar treasure to Shakespeare's manuscripts.
But Lagina said that for him, it's more about filling in the blanks of the story and solving the mystery.
"What really happened on Oak Island?"
For the rest of the summer, Lagina said he and the others will assess which anomalies show the most promise and warrant further investigation with drilling. They have to be selective because wherever they drill needs to be worth the cash, he said.
They've already spent hundreds of thousands of dollars, exploring Oak Island (Lagina's brother Marty — who's also in on the search — did well in the oil and gas industry).
They must do the drilling soon, though; their government-granted treasure trove licence expires in December.
"I wish I had an X-marks-the-spot, but alas, I have no 'X.'"
While Lagina acknowledged they might not find anything, he said they're excited about their chances.
"I believe that it will be a fairly rich, to use the word, story of what happened there."
However, not everyone is so sure.
Alex Storm got into the Nova Scotian treasure hunting business in the 1960s and has had substantial success, finding famous wrecks, such as the French treasure ship Le Chameau. He said he bases all his searching on documentation and verifiable data — something he said Oak Island lacks.
"I don't think it will work out to anything. It's just people keeping busy and trying to keep a dream alive."
But that hasn't stopped people from trying.
© Copyright (c) Postmedia News
By Sabrina Doyle, New Brunswick Telegraph-Journal August 22, 2011
SAINT JOHN, N.B. — In a renewed bid to uncover the elusive treasure believed by many to be buried deep within Oak Island off Nova Scotia's South Shore, a group of treasure hunters have used electrical currents in a bid to detect secret underground tunnels.
For the past six years, Rick Lagina and four others — including Dan Blankenship, whose lifetime dedication to the island is almost as legendary as the place itself — have been searching for the hidden treasure.
This summer, they put their hopes in technology.
On a hot, cloudless day in early July, in the middle of the island, they placed a device that miners, archeologists and environmentalists often use to map underground structures.
Powered by a car battery, the square, greyish-green box zapped 800-volt bursts of energy through attached cords to various points on the island, to depths sometimes the length of a football field.
The method, called electrical resistivity, pulsed electric currents through the earth and recorded how much each area repelled the charge.
Lagina said he hoped to pinpoint spots that were particularly resistant or unexpectedly conductive compared to their surroundings — anything out of the ordinary.
Lagina has been dreaming about the fabled Nova Scotia island ever since he was an 11-year-old living in Michigan. He read a magazine article about the 200-year-old search for the money pit some believe was buried on Oak Island by pirates.
Now 59 years old, Lagina is still dreaming.
After two weeks of gathering data, the team sent the numbers to a geological analyst in Montreal. Lagina said he got the results back three weeks ago.
When asked if there was anything interesting, he paused.
"There are interesting anomalies, yes," he said. He later added, "There are more than several sites that we are very excited about."
But the island has a well-documented history of thwarting discovery efforts, Lagina said.
While they were cutting through the brush to make way for their line grid, everything that could go wrong did, he said. The truck's engine blew, tools went missing, and the resistivity device itself stopped working more than once.
When they phoned the manufacturer in France, the woman on the line said, "'Can't happen, never happened, not in the history of the instrument. The unit is incapable of shutting down.'
"Five times it shut down," Lagina said.
Legend has it that the Oak Island treasure will not be found until seven humans have died trying to find it and all the oak trees on the island are gone. So far, the island's native umbrella oaks have all wilted away, and the treasure hunt has claimed six lives — none of them from Lagina's crew.
Ever since a teenage Daniel McGinnis came across a curious depression in the ground in 1795, there have been many excavations of the Money Pit — all of which have been fruitless except for the discovery of various booby traps and suggestive bits of metal.
Theories abound as to what might be hidden there, from pirate booty to knights Templar treasure to Shakespeare's manuscripts.
But Lagina said that for him, it's more about filling in the blanks of the story and solving the mystery.
"What really happened on Oak Island?"
For the rest of the summer, Lagina said he and the others will assess which anomalies show the most promise and warrant further investigation with drilling. They have to be selective because wherever they drill needs to be worth the cash, he said.
They've already spent hundreds of thousands of dollars, exploring Oak Island (Lagina's brother Marty — who's also in on the search — did well in the oil and gas industry).
They must do the drilling soon, though; their government-granted treasure trove licence expires in December.
"I wish I had an X-marks-the-spot, but alas, I have no 'X.'"
While Lagina acknowledged they might not find anything, he said they're excited about their chances.
"I believe that it will be a fairly rich, to use the word, story of what happened there."
However, not everyone is so sure.
Alex Storm got into the Nova Scotian treasure hunting business in the 1960s and has had substantial success, finding famous wrecks, such as the French treasure ship Le Chameau. He said he bases all his searching on documentation and verifiable data — something he said Oak Island lacks.
"I don't think it will work out to anything. It's just people keeping busy and trying to keep a dream alive."
But that hasn't stopped people from trying.
© Copyright (c) Postmedia News
- Freeyourmindnow

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- Posts: 9377
- Joined: Thu Jun 03, 2010 12:08 pm
bb747 wrote:Treasure hunters use electric pulses to probe Oak Island
By Sabrina Doyle, New Brunswick Telegraph-Journal August 22, 2011
SAINT JOHN, N.B. — In a renewed bid to uncover the elusive treasure believed by many to be buried deep within Oak Island off Nova Scotia's South Shore, a group of treasure hunters have used electrical currents in a bid to detect secret underground tunnels.
For the past six years, Rick Lagina and four others — including Dan Blankenship, whose lifetime dedication to the island is almost as legendary as the place itself — have been searching for the hidden treasure.
This summer, they put their hopes in technology.
On a hot, cloudless day in early July, in the middle of the island, they placed a device that miners, archeologists and environmentalists often use to map underground structures.
Powered by a car battery, the square, greyish-green box zapped 800-volt bursts of energy through attached cords to various points on the island, to depths sometimes the length of a football field.
The method, called electrical resistivity, pulsed electric currents through the earth and recorded how much each area repelled the charge.
Lagina said he hoped to pinpoint spots that were particularly resistant or unexpectedly conductive compared to their surroundings — anything out of the ordinary.
Lagina has been dreaming about the fabled Nova Scotia island ever since he was an 11-year-old living in Michigan. He read a magazine article about the 200-year-old search for the money pit some believe was buried on Oak Island by pirates.
Now 59 years old, Lagina is still dreaming.
After two weeks of gathering data, the team sent the numbers to a geological analyst in Montreal. Lagina said he got the results back three weeks ago.
When asked if there was anything interesting, he paused.
"There are interesting anomalies, yes," he said. He later added, "There are more than several sites that we are very excited about."
But the island has a well-documented history of thwarting discovery efforts, Lagina said.
While they were cutting through the brush to make way for their line grid, everything that could go wrong did, he said. The truck's engine blew, tools went missing, and the resistivity device itself stopped working more than once.
When they phoned the manufacturer in France, the woman on the line said, "'Can't happen, never happened, not in the history of the instrument. The unit is incapable of shutting down.'
"Five times it shut down," Lagina said.
Legend has it that the Oak Island treasure will not be found until seven humans have died trying to find it and all the oak trees on the island are gone. So far, the island's native umbrella oaks have all wilted away, and the treasure hunt has claimed six lives — none of them from Lagina's crew.
Ever since a teenage Daniel McGinnis came across a curious depression in the ground in 1795, there have been many excavations of the Money Pit — all of which have been fruitless except for the discovery of various booby traps and suggestive bits of metal.
Theories abound as to what might be hidden there, from pirate booty to knights Templar treasure to Shakespeare's manuscripts.
But Lagina said that for him, it's more about filling in the blanks of the story and solving the mystery.
"What really happened on Oak Island?"
For the rest of the summer, Lagina said he and the others will assess which anomalies show the most promise and warrant further investigation with drilling. They have to be selective because wherever they drill needs to be worth the cash, he said.
They've already spent hundreds of thousands of dollars, exploring Oak Island (Lagina's brother Marty — who's also in on the search — did well in the oil and gas industry).
They must do the drilling soon, though; their government-granted treasure trove licence expires in December.
"I wish I had an X-marks-the-spot, but alas, I have no 'X.'"
While Lagina acknowledged they might not find anything, he said they're excited about their chances.
"I believe that it will be a fairly rich, to use the word, story of what happened there."
However, not everyone is so sure.
Alex Storm got into the Nova Scotian treasure hunting business in the 1960s and has had substantial success, finding famous wrecks, such as the French treasure ship Le Chameau. He said he bases all his searching on documentation and verifiable data — something he said Oak Island lacks.
"I don't think it will work out to anything. It's just people keeping busy and trying to keep a dream alive."
But that hasn't stopped people from trying.
© Copyright (c) Postmedia News
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