Stuff You Should Know - SYSK Selects: Is there treasure on Oak Island?
Episode Date: March 3, 2018Off Nova Scotia, the tiny spit of land called Oak Island has been host to waves of treasure hunters for more than 200 years. Some of them lost their lives in the search for a treasure reputedly buried... in a deep pit. But is anything really there? Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called,
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stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude,
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Hey everybody, it's me, Josh,
and for this week's SYSK Selects,
I've chosen the Oak Island Mystery.
It's one we've gotten requests to do for a long time,
and even after we did it, we've still gotten requests
to do it, so here it is again.
It's a good one from 2015, and as an added bonus,
keep an ear out for a surprise cameo by El Globo de la Muerte
before we knew what it was called.
Enjoy.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know
from HowStuffWorks.com.
Hey, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh Clark, there's Charles W. Chuck Bryant and Jerry.
So this is Stuff You Should Know.
Howdy.
Is that your Nova Scotia accent?
No, no, sir.
What was that?
It was just a howdy.
Oh, okay.
It did sound funny though, that was my heat haul version.
We've talked about heat haul, you loved that show, didn't you?
No, I never really watched it.
No, I'm thinking of my other podcast go-hosts.
Yeah, really?
I didn't watch heat haul much.
Yeah, I did.
I was from the south, though.
Toledo, you don't think that was like Yokel stuff?
No, I mean, it was on every once in a while, it just passed by.
Right.
You know, what was it, Mini Pearl?
She had the hat with the price tag on still.
Yeah, that's all anyone ever remembers.
She started that.
And then there was some guy with the banjo, I think.
Sure.
I think this is one of the most requested shows.
Oak Island?
Yeah, I've had a lot, I didn't really know much about it,
but it seems like every other week someone's saying,
Oak Island, guys?
Do Oak Island.
Yep.
We're gonna do Oak Island.
We want everybody to be quiet.
That's right.
So that's what we're doing.
Did you know much about this ahead of time?
No, not at all.
I did.
It's one of those things like you hear about
and you hear a little more and you don't really dig in.
Sure.
But so the whole thing is just kind of this neat legend
that's kind of out there.
Yeah, I don't know how I missed it.
And then once you start digging in, you're like, yeah.
I understand.
You say that with a skeptical tone.
Well, I think this is one of those cases where.
There's no treasure.
I don't know.
There's some weirdness.
There's some things that make me say, this is very odd,
but I also understand the skeptical point of view.
Sure.
So, well, what I've just kind of demonstrated
is a little bit of a middle of the road approach
to Oak Island, which is unusual.
Most people approach Oak Island either as true believe
or treasure hunters or total skeptics.
Right.
Like there's not a lot of middle of the road.
It's a divisive island as far as islands go.
It's only like a hundred and something acres.
It's not a big island.
It's off the coast of Nova Scotia, 140 acres.
Yeah, that's not big.
Yeah, but for as small as it is, it's pretty divisive.
Yeah, I don't think, I don't see what the big deal
about being skeptical about the, I mean,
a buried treasure, I mean, who cares?
Oh, if you're a skeptic, you have to poo poo everything.
Absolutely anything that's even remotely frivolous
has to be squashed.
But this isn't even like supernatural or anything.
It's just, I mean, I guess there's the curse thing.
Yeah, that's new though.
But that's just lower.
That's all TV.
That's not even lower from what I understand.
Oh, really?
It's like new.
It's like literally just a media creation.
Like strictly from the TV show.
That before that, I mean, like people didn't really see it
as a curse.
There's just buried treasure on Oak Island.
Yeah, and if it's the 1800s and you're digging for things,
there's a good chance you might die.
Yeah, it's dangerous.
It is.
It doesn't mean it's cursed.
I read this really great article written in 1965
by Mildred Restall.
Yeah, I read it from the New York Times.
No, this was in like Ottawa Magazine.
And it was written by her.
Yeah, I read one.
It might have been the same one.
I wonder, it was like within a very short time
of her husband and son dying.
I thought, wow, this lady's really composed.
But then I read a little further and found out
that Mildred Restall and her husband, Robert, who
moved their family to Oak Island so Robert could
hunt for the treasure in 1959, I think, started out.
They met because they were both circus performers
with nerves of steel who rode motorcycles
in a huge globe sphere.
While he would go upside down, and she would go side to side,
and they would miss each other hundreds of times in an act.
And now after that, I was like, oh, yeah, this lady,
she's tough as nails.
Yeah, have you never seen one of those acts?
Sure I have.
I just didn't realize that that's what they did.
Sure, gotcha.
Yeah.
And it seems kind of odd to have that.
I thought that was a newer act.
No, it's totally 50s, screams 50s.
Really?
Yeah.
See, I thought it screamed 70s.
Oh, it does too, yeah, you're right.
Sure.
Yeah, evil can evil is why that screams that.
All right, so let's dive in here, eh?
Well, yeah, the rest all is when they moved in 1959.
They were hardly the first people that moved to Oak Island
and set up residence there in order to find the treasure.
But prior to 1795, Oak Island was just another island.
Yeah, and it's still just another island.
Well, just because of all of the attention that's
been paid to it, it's not, it's no longer,
it's been changed forever.
That's true.
Prior to 1795, though, it was just like whatever.
There's Oak Island until a local kid from Nova Scotia
named Robert McGinnis, Daniel McGinnis, sorry,
decided to go explore.
Yeah, and this, you won't find any two people that
agree on these legend stories, even with Daniel McGinnis,
because none of this stuff was really written down
until much later.
It's 1795.
Nothing was written down in 1795.
Nothing was documented until the 1900s when Star Trek came along.
Certainly, things like this weren't documented,
because he was just a boy.
He was 16 years old.
He was on a fishing expedition.
And as the story goes, and we'll just use the most commonly
agreed upon story here, he was just
kind of traipsing around the island and found
like a block from a pulley attached to a tree, an oak tree.
And then a big sort of cleared out area underneath it
where it looked like someone had maybe been digging
and reburying something.
Yeah, there was like a depression under this tackle block
from a pulley.
Yeah, it was just cleared out.
And he was like, huh, bet you anything,
there's a pirate's treasure down there.
Yeah, I mean, being a 1795 teenager, he was like,
there's pirates all over the place.
And it's entirely possible.
We're talking the 18th century.
We're talking a time when piracy was still very much
in the public imagination.
Yeah, buried treasure was a hot thing.
Yeah, I mean, there is such a thing.
And at the very least, if no single pirate ever buried
this treasure, there is a lot of rumor
about buried treasure of pirates.
I think it makes total sense.
Sure.
You can't carry that stuff around all the time
because you get robbed and looted.
So you bury that junk.
Bury it.
Come back for it later.
Right.
Make a weird, funny-looking map that
looks like a sweaty pillowcase.
And put a big X in the middle of it.
Sure.
And then put that in a coffee can,
and then bury that in your backyard.
That's right.
You got to bury twice because it's so nice.
That's the pirate theme.
Really?
Can you say it like a pirate?
No.
I didn't know you would do that.
All right, so he starts digging.
His interest is peaked.
He gets a couple of friends, comes back the next day.
Anthony, Valhahn, and John Smith.
And this is likely a pseudonym, you think?
Probably.
And so they start digging, reportedly go down about 10
feet and found a layer of a platform of oak logs.
Yeah, which is you're not supposed to find that when
you dig into a hole under a pulley.
No, you're not supposed to.
It's not worthy.
First, they found a stone that they
took to be man-made, like two feet down.
And then 10 feet down, they found an oak platform.
Yeah.
And then supposedly every 10 feet after that,
they kept finding these platforms.
And we'll just go ahead and call this the money pit,
which is what everyone calls it.
Yeah.
This main location is the money pit.
Because just the first oak platform alone says there's
treasure buried here.
That's right.
So basically they got down as far as they could for three
teenage boys with picks and shovels and said, this isn't,
we're not finding anything and we need help, basically.
Yeah, we need to bring in some old-timey equipment.
Yeah, bigger tools.
Get some old-timey funding, and maybe get some old-timey
other people involved.
And they did, but it took like nine years before they came
back, I think.
Yeah, and they filled it back in because they didn't just
want to leave a big, empty hole there.
It's an obvious sign that there's a treasure there.
So like you said, nine hours later, they did come back
with investors.
Nine years later.
What did I say?
Hours.
No, I said years.
I will bet you all the money on Oak Island
that you said hours.
At any rate, it was nine years.
And they came back and formed with some funding from the
Anzlo Company, and that'll be a common refrain here.
And apparently, I did some writing on modern treasure
hunting, and it's all about the funding.
It's just like any business.
These dudes have boats and equipment, but they're like,
if you want a piece of this action, we need some dough
to go out there and find the stuff.
It's like selling future contracts of potential treasure.
Exactly.
And it's not just treasure hunting that does that.
Lots of archaeological expeditions are funded like that.
If your local universities, we got enough problems as it is.
We can't fund your dig.
You can go to private investors who, ultimately, it's
still treasure hunting.
It's just churched up and called archaeological things.
So they come back as the Anzlo Company and dig down deeper
this time, and they did find some interesting things,
notably things that shouldn't be there, like coconut fiber
and charcoal and putty.
And coconuts, obviously, not native to Nova Scotia.
So they're like, someone has put something down here.
Well, yeah, also at the time, coconut fiber
was used as a packing material, though.
So clearly, somebody was using it as some sort of construction
material.
It wasn't accidentally dropped there.
It was put there.
That's right.
So a legend has it they dug down until they hit 90 feet
and then found a flat stone with a coated inscription
that they could not make sense of.
Since then, other people have supposedly
translated it to read 40 feet below,
2 million pounds are buried.
There is no stone today.
There is no rubbing.
There is no photograph.
No, it's called the famous cipherstone.
And it was supposedly lost in, like, 1919.
But yeah, there's no evidence.
Yeah, and so anything you run across, like in a book
or on the web or something, is conjecture.
There's no document of this cipherstone.
But they do think that something that
accounts for the cipherstone did exist at some point,
but no one knows for certain.
Right.
Exactly what it said.
And if you're wondering, 2 million pounds of what?
I assumed that they meant British currency.
Yeah, that would be funny if those.
Just like 2 million pounds of pirate scat.
Coconut husks.
So they get down to about close to 100 feet.
And then go home for the day and drink rum, I would imagine.
And then come back, and it's full of water.
And they tried to bail it out.
But they were basically like, this is, you know, seven.
Well, I guess at this point, it was the 1800s, early 1800s.
But we're still screwed.
Right, so Robert McGinnis and what
was the name of the company he came back with?
The Onslau Company.
The Onslau Company.
What you just described is the process
that people have followed and the troubles that people
have run into ever since.
And we'll talk about some of the following expeditions,
because McGinnis' troubles didn't put anybody else off.
No.
Right after this.
The Onslau Company.
On the podcast, HeyDude, the 90s,
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Stuff you shouldn't know.
OK, so Chuck, something really weird
happened to the McGinnis expedition, the second one.
Yes.
When he grew up, became a man, came back with the Onslau
company, and dug down.
Groped became a man.
They went to bed after drinking a bunch of rum, like you said.
And then they woke up, and the pit had filled with water.
And it's basically been filled with water ever since.
Yeah.
Which is a problem.
If you're a treasure hunter, you want dry conditions as much
as possible to get to the treasure.
Water is an impediment.
And it became such an impediment that ultimately,
McGinnis and the Onslau company just kind of gave up.
I guess they ran out of funding, right?
Yeah, which has also been a refrain over the years.
Right.
You can only dig so long until the person eventually who's
funding you says, I'm going to pull the plug.
Right.
But years later, a question was raised about that flooding.
People started to wonder, was that actually an engineered
booby trap?
Right.
And that's become a question among treasure hunters
for centuries on.
Yeah, of course, the skeptics will say no.
It is just sea water, because later they found out that it
was actually salt water.
And there are other similar underground water tunnels on
the island.
So they're like, no, this is just going on on this island.
And the believers will say, no, it was a booby
trap set by the pirates.
But the believers in this case have a kind of strange
evidence to back up their ideas.
So in 1849, after the McGinnis expedition, the second one
left many years after, the Truro company, which is kind of
tough to say, they showed up to the island to look for the
money pit, and they started digging again, right?
Yes.
And when they started digging, they ran in the same problem.
They're the shaft that they dug filled with water.
So they started to think, well, wait a minute, maybe this is
purposeful.
At the very least, maybe there's some sort of sea caves.
And if there's sea caves that are filling this thing up,
potentially we could stop up the sea caves, and then we can
avoid the water problem and keep digging.
So they sent people from the expedition to look all over the
shoreline of the island.
And they found something really astounding that, from what I
understand still to this day, is the one thing that confounds
all skeptics when it comes to Oak Island.
They found what can really only be described as a man-made
drainage system that basically accepts the incoming tide and
potentially funnels the tide to the money pit.
Yeah.
So they continued to dig and drill because they were
encouraged by finding things they said were metal or maybe
even gold on the augers.
And even more coconut husk.
Yeah.
So they were like, there's something down there.
But they, like you said, it kept flooding.
And this is when they realized it was seawater.
And they noticed, hey, it's actually filling up and falling
back down along with the tides.
So that's when they built a temporary cofferdam to kind of
see what was going on.
And that's when they found this five-finger drain.
And which, yeah, there's really no explanation that
didn't just accidentally happen.
No.
And what gives it away is it's 145 feet wide.
And it's about the height of the difference between high tide
and low tide.
So it's clearly meant to funnel the tide into this drain.
There's five drains.
They're obviously finger drains.
Finger drains are like French drains, basically.
And they all connect into one larger drain.
But the real dead giveaway was the appearance, again, of
coconut fiber.
Coconut fiber was used to keep the sand out of the stone
drain.
And a layer of coconut fiber on an island off of the coast of
Nova Scotia suggests man's intervention.
That's right.
But what that means, who knows?
Again, treasure seekers will say that they put this to keep
you from finding that treasure ever.
Right.
It was evidence in favor of the idea that the money pit is
booby-trapped.
Yeah, and I think skeptics will say that I think there was a
theory that there was a lot of weird freemason rituals going
on.
And maybe they buried some stuff there and not treasure
necessarily.
But maybe they built this drain to keep people from
digging into there.
Yeah, modern treasure hunters are like, great.
Let me find whatever the masons buried.
Even if it's not gold, ingots could be like the secrets of
the freemasons.
Yeah, the Ark of the Covenant.
Yeah, they said that could be down there.
Or the Holy Grail.
Yeah, you want to talk about some of the legends of what's
down there?
Yeah, we might as well.
OK, so the predominant one that Robert McGinnis initially
thought of was that it was pirate treasure because he was a
teenager in the 1790s, right?
Right.
Successive people have come to see the money pit if it is
sabotaged like it is and the construction that went into it.
It's something that would have had to have been carried out
by a group more sophisticated and better funded and better
organized than Captain Kidd's crew.
Yeah, more sober at the very least.
Yeah, exactly.
So one of the rumors of what treasures buried down there is
that the freemasons buried something or the Knights
Templar buried something.
Because the Knights Templar, they were like the militant
arm of fundamental Christianity in the 10th century
during pilgrimages, aka the Crusades, to the Middle East,
right?
Yeah, so that means they got a lot of dough over the years.
They accumulated great wealth, had a big falling out with the
Catholic Church, of course.
Yeah, supposedly they were found worshiping Baphomet, the
goat-headed, breasted Satan.
That's sort of like the statue, right?
That's exactly like the statue.
Oklahoma?
Yeah, the one that's being constructed by the Satanic
Temple right now.
Yeah, I put that on our Facebook page and it was very
divisive.
I can imagine.
No surprise.
Yeah.
I thought it was just a nice, cool-looking piece of art.
I mean, man, it's pretty well done.
Yeah, it looked nice.
So yeah, so the Knights Templar has all this dough.
They have a falling out with the Catholic Church for obvious
reasons that you just pointed out.
And then they buried their treasure.
So I guess the Catholic Church wouldn't get their hands on it.
Right, but among that treasure supposedly is the Holy Grail.
Yeah.
Which is what the Knights were looking for in Monty Python
in the Holy Grail.
Sure.
And the Ark of the Covenant, which is what Indiana Jones is
looking for in Indiana Jones and, or no, Raiders of the
Lost Ark.
And so some people have said, this is where the Knights
Templar buried their treasure.
This is where the Ark of the Covenant is.
Then other people have said, whatever, the Knights Templar
never made it to Nova Scotia.
But the Freemasons obviously took over the secrets and
protections of the Knights Templar.
They're like the modern day Knights Templar society.
And they probably buried the Ark and or the Holy Grail.
Duh.
Yeah, and apparently a lot of masons have been on these
excavation teams over the years, which of course is
evidence that they're looking for their old stuff.
Right.
Or, I mean, it also is entirely possible that there is a
rumor among masons that this is true, whether it's true or
not, that could have gotten some Masonic adventures to go
look, you know?
Another theory that's been thrown out there is that
Marie Antoinette, during the French Revolution, got all her
jewelry together and gave it to a woman and said, flee.
And she fled to Nova Scotia, and then the French Navy came
along and constructed this elaborate system to bury
her jewels.
Right.
There's another little possible theory.
And supposedly evidence that backs that up is that the
woman who was given the jewels, who was entrusted with the
jewels, was spotted in Nova Scotia some time after that.
That's right.
What was she doing there?
Burying jewels.
Another unusual Nova Scotia link is that of Francis Bacon.
Yeah, I like this one.
So remember Francis Bacon from The Scientific Method?
He was the guy that really first put that down in written
form.
Brilliant man.
Possibly Shakespeare.
That's one of the theories is that he was the real Shakespeare.
And the idea is that he hid his manuscripts in the money pit
on Oak Island.
And that seems kind of far-fetched.
But apparently Francis Bacon owned land in Nova Scotia.
Yeah, and he was a preserver of things in Mercury.
And supposedly they found flasks of Mercury on the island.
I don't buy that one because I've always believed that
Shakespeare was Shakespeare, and not Francis Bacon or his
sister, or in the other various crackpot theories about who
really wrote that stuff.
I like Francis Bacon and Shakespeare.
You do?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Does the thought of it, or do you think the evidence is?
I don't know about the evidence.
I don't know enough about it.
Gotcha.
I like the thought of it.
He seems like a pretty cool dude.
So some of the other treasure hunters started flocking there in
the mid to late 1800s because that was just a big time for
treasure hunting.
Yeah.
Well, the California gold rush was going on in 1849, which is
why the 49ers are called that.
That's right.
And I think there's kind of a treasure fever going through the land.
That's a good way to say it.
So the El Dorado Company in 1866 went out there and there were
various methods over the years to try and block off the flow of
water.
They tried digging shafts and tunnels.
They tried to divert it.
They tried to intercept it.
And basically all that ended up doing was causing a nightmare for
future expeditions to the point where people had a hard time even
finding the original money bit to begin with.
Right.
A lot of the landmarks, I guess you'd call them, were just
utterly destroyed.
Supposedly in that article I read from Mrs. Restall, she said
that there weren't any more oaks on Oak Island any longer.
No more oak trees?
Yeah.
Which, because of excavations, just tore them all down.
So it'd be very tough to find your way around if whatever directions
were written at a time when there were plenty of oak trees and that
used oak trees as guides.
Yeah.
Like go to this oak tree and turn left.
Exactly.
Yeah.
Yeah.
So yeah, the excavation has definitely changed the face of that
island tremendously.
One thing we do have that is tangible as far as, I don't know if you
call it evidence or not, because it really doesn't say much.
But Frederick Blair in 1890, in the 1890s came with the Oak Island
Treasure Company and he actually found something that still exists.
It's a little bitty, tiny piece of parchment paper and it looks like
a curse of letters V.I. are on it.
But I mean it's small and it really leads to nothing other than
something man-made is there.
Right.
V.I., you know, I don't think anyone's any conjecture about what that
means.
Six?
Maybe.
Six billion pounds, buried 600 feet down.
Right.
Who knows.
And then the 20th century has seen or saw, since we're in the 21st
century now, successive waves, pretty constant waves of people coming.
Yeah.
Looking for the Oak Island Treasure.
One of them was a young Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who also was a
Mason.
Yeah.
He came along as an investor and apparently always pined to go back
to Oak Island to search for the treasure, like it got in his blood.
All right.
So after this message break, we are going to look at a few more of the
things that have been discovered there over the years and what this
all means.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called David Lasher and Christine Taylor,
stars of the cult classic show, Hey Dude, bring you back to the days of slip
dresses and choker necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point, but we are going
to unpack and dive back into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it and now we're calling on all of our friends to come back and
relive it.
It's a podcast packed with interviews, co-stars, friends and
nonstop references to the best decade ever.
Do you remember going to Blockbuster?
Do you remember Nintendo 64?
Do you remember getting frosted tips?
Was that a cereal?
No, it was hair.
Do you remember AOL instant messenger and the dial-up sound like poltergeist?
So leave a code on your best friend's beeper because you'll want to be there
when the nostalgia starts flowing.
Each episode will rival the feeling of taking out the cartridge from your
Game Boy, blowing on it and popping it back in as we take you back to the 90s.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called on the iHeart radio app, Apple podcasts,
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So Chuck, I was saying the 20th century saw a wave after wave of treasure hunter come,
dig and leave penniless.
Sure.
Uh, one of those people though that, and we also talked about how Oak Island has been
utterly changed.
Probably nobody changed the, the topography and geography of Oak Island more than a guy
named Robert Dunfield, who was a, uh, an engineer, I believe, or no, a geologist.
And in 1965, he built a, a bridge, uh, a highway.
Yeah, causeway.
Yeah.
From the mainland to Oak Island.
And right after he did that, right after it was completed, he started moving heavy
equipment in and just started digging like crazy.
Yeah.
He got down a hundred feet, uh, I'm sorry, 140 feet down, a hundred feet wide and, uh,
kept everything a secret until 2003 and didn't, they didn't find a lot.
They found some porcelain dishware from the 1600s, which is what, you know, what was that
doing there?
Yeah.
Good find for sure.
The early 1600s even.
Um, but he of course didn't find a lot either ultimately in the way of riches because, um,
he kept having problems despite his machinery with, uh, collapsing, uh, caves, heavy rains,
more tide water and, um, but he did say there was a cavern under some limestone.
He did confirm one of these underwater cavern, uh, rumors, right?
Supposedly.
Yeah.
Which accounts for potentially a natural formation.
If you're a skeptic, if you're a believer, then it just confirms the booby trap thing.
Yeah.
Um, he, uh, finally left after basically, he was the guy who demolished the most landmarks.
Um, but shortly after he left, a pair of guys who formed what's called the Triton Alliance,
uh, David Tobias and Dan Blankenship, uh, they started working and they actually brought
along some high tech stuff for 1970, which was like a underwater camera, video camera.
Yeah.
It's probably the size of a, you know, small car, right?
That they lowered down there and, uh, they, well they drilled a hole and they called it
borehole 10X and they, it was filled with water, of course, as all holes in Oak Island
do, but they lowered this underwater camera down there and they swore to God that they
saw evidence of human remains and treasure chests.
That's what they said.
They, whether you're convinced or not, um, Tobias and Blankenship were convinced enough
that to, no, Blankenship still lives on Oak Island.
Yeah, he, he became sort of the, uh, the main guy that remains today as the main guy.
Right.
And this was 1970 when they showed up.
He's still on that island and he's supposedly, he's, oh yeah.
Yeah, he's pretty, he's old.
No, but it was the 1970s when they showed up and he still lives there.
No, that's what I'm saying.
He is age wise in his 80s.
I gotcha.
Yeah.
He's an old feller.
We hammered that out.
He's apparently an ordinary feller, too, because there was another guy named Fred Nolan
who is a famous, uh, Oak Island explorer, um, who, well, they ran a fowl of one another.
Apparently Blankenship had a rifle obviously in his hand during the argument and the cops
had to come out and take the rifle away.
Really?
Yeah.
And supposedly now nobody is allowed on Oak Island, although I guess you can if you're
filming a TV show, um, except for Dan Blankenship who's the only resident.
Well, he's a part of the TV show.
Okay.
So he was like, come on.
Um, yeah, what's that history channel, I think?
I don't know.
Yeah, there's a couple of, uh, the people that he's working with today, uh, Rick and
Marty Lagina, um, I think are brothers from Michigan and they are the subject of the TV
show, which I'll have to check out at some point.
Sure.
Um, Fred.
But that's supposedly where the curse came from is that show.
Oh, really?
Yeah.
I did not know that.
So it's, it's been a present since last year.
Right.
Um, Frederick Nolan also, uh, is the one who in 1981 discovered, um, five large cone shaped
boulders that, uh, when you look at it above looks like a cross and it is forever known
as Nolan's Cross.
What does it mean?
Who knows?
Maybe the boulders were just sort of, uh, in the shape of a cross by accident.
But well, Fred Nolan bought five plots of land bottom.
So he was a resident there and inhabitant there too.
I'm not sure what happened to old Fred Nolan though.
Yeah, I'm not sure.
That's a good point.
He may have been lost to the curse of Oak Island.
So we, we keep using like present tense, like it's a, it's entirely true.
As anyone with history channel knows, there are still people who are looking actively
for the treasure of Oak Island.
Right?
Yeah.
Like they believe that if you put all the evidence together, Nolan's Cross, coconut
fibers, the, the finger drains, um, the evidence from Blankenship and Tobias, their video stuff.
Like if you put all this together, there is evidence that there is treasure down there.
Somebody just needs to dig deep enough in the right place.
Yeah.
And then bam, they're going to find it.
Right?
Yeah.
I mean, man, it's, they've dug so deep though and so wide.
Yeah.
How, how much deeper could they have gone back in the pirate days?
You know?
I don't know.
It just seems very unlikely to me that there's any treasure there.
Well, then you would be in the skeptics camp and you would definitely not be alone.
Uh, yeah, but skeptic thinking there may have been something buried or some weird thing
going on there, but I don't know about treasure.
Right.
Who knows though?
Uh, skeptics will also say these are natural sinkholes, uh, instead of traps, like we said
earlier, um, they will also say things like, you know, there's all kinds of underground
caverns around here.
There's nothing special.
I don't know what they say about finding things like porcelain plates.
Yeah.
I didn't see anything like that.
But uh, you know, when you, when the stone is lost, this inscripted stone, um, when there's
no evidence really to point to, except this tiny piece of parchment paper, like, I don't
know, it's pretty flimsy.
Well, none of the excavations started to be documented until the 19th century.
So all of McGinnis's early work is all based on hearsay and conjecture.
Yeah.
It's all up for debate, whether he was a teenager, um, was the, uh, the tackle block
for the pulley.
Yeah.
Was that added to the story later on?
Right.
Um, if so, then all of a sudden that, that depression under the tree branch just becomes
a depression under a tree branch, right?
You know, the pulley was the thing.
It's, it's excuse my physics joke, but the fulcrum of this whole thing.
You know?
Yeah.
So, um, if you, if you start to look at it on its face, all of this legend, you realize
that most of it is just legend and that the only real physical evidence is that scrap
of parchment paper that no one even knows whether that was planted or not.
Well, yeah, that's, that's one of the things skeptics often say is that anything you found
there is, could have been planted just to get money to fund the digs.
Right.
Like, look, we found this, uh, this parchment and this porcelain plate and there's some
gold dust on our auger.
Did we mention the coconut fiber and the coconut fiber again?
Right.
So send us another, uh, like, I don't know, 10 mil.
Yeah.
We're digging.
Right.
So, uh, there you have it.
Oak Island.
Again, though, those, those finger drains are just weird.
Yeah.
That's weird for sure.
It's cool.
What, who did what there?
Yeah.
Basically, they just need to like strip mine the entire island all the way down and there
you go.
I don't know why anyone hasn't thought of that yet.
Yeah.
Just completely strip it of all its natural beauty.
Right.
So there's nothing left.
Sure.
You're going to just shrug your shoulders afterward and say there's nothing here.
Right.
Yeah.
Go man.
If you want to know more about Oak Island, apparently you can watch a weekly television
show on it.
You can also type Oak Island into the search bar at how stuff works.
And since I said search bar, it's time for listener mail.
I'm going to call this poison ivy follow up from JB guys have an interesting story about
how you can get poison ivy from more than just touching it.
When I was eight or so, we lived in California, had a big fireplace.
One day we decided to get our own firewood from outside and got a couple of big logs.
My sister, we were both at about seven at the time.
We she and I used the fire to roast marshmallows and make s'mores.
Great night.
Right.
An hour or so later, one of my sisters came into my parents room saying she couldn't breathe
her face had swollen to twice as normal size and her eyes were shut.
Her throat was barely able to pass air through it.
An emergency room trip and a shot or two of steroids later, she was okay, but it took
a while to find out what happened.
Apparently the poison ivy had been removed from the logs we got, but the sap was still
in the wood.
And when we burned them, the sap was present in the smoke and my sister was highly allergic
and hailed it, got it in her throat and lungs and it blew up her face like a red balloon.
Best side note of this, we had passport photos the next day, we were moving to Germany.
So her passport pick was a giant red swollen balloon face.
That's awesome.
The best side note is JB in Fort Sill, Oklahoma.
Way to go JB, that was a good story.
You get the blue ribbon for it.
And I guess she had that passport photo for a full decade, unless she just had it retaken.
Yeah.
Would you live with that passport photo?
No.
I totally would.
I think it'd be funny.
Except for the whole, you know, this doesn't look like you think.
Yeah.
That'd be a drag.
It would be a huge drag.
TSA likes to hassle.
Yeah.
I'm well known in my family for making funny faces anytime I have a photo ID of any kind
taken.
Right.
Just for fun.
I've always done it.
That is so fun.
Emily likes it.
You got anything else?
Nope.
Okay.
Well, thanks again for the awesome story, JB.
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For more on this and thousands of other topics, visit howstuffworks.com.
On the podcast, Hey Dude, the 90s called, David Lasher and Christine Taylor, stars of
the cult classic show Hey Dude, bring you back to the days of slip dresses and choker
necklaces.
We're going to use Hey Dude as our jumping off point, but we are going to unpack and
dive back into the decade of the 90s.
We lived it, and now we're calling on all of our friends to come back and relive it.
Listen to Hey Dude, the 90s called on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you get your podcasts.
Listen to Frosted Tips with Lance Bass on the iHeart radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever
you listen to podcasts.