Oak Island’s Most Mysterious Ancient Structures Exposed | The Curse of Oak Island
The Curse of Oak Island: Unearthing the Deepest Secrets Yet in Season 11
As the highly anticipated Season 11 of The Curse of Oak Island draws near, Rick and Marty Lagina—along with the dedicated Fellowship of the Dig—are gearing up for what may be their most revelatory year yet.
With dramatic finds, ancient structures, and clues pointing to centuries-old international connections, the mystery on Oak Island seems deeper, older, and more intricate than ever before.

🔍 Clue #3: The Well on Lot 26 – A Possible Link to Pre-Columbian Activity?
What looked like a crude, forgotten well on Lot 26 has quickly transformed into one of the most tantalizing features on the island.
- Proximity: Just 100 feet from a previously unearthed 16th-century stone wall.
- Anomaly: In winter, the well never froze, prompting Rick’s initial curiosity.
- Breakthrough: Dr. Ian Spooner’s water tests showed silver content—a rare result outside the Money Pit.
- Dating Evidence: Carbon dating of a twig found at the base revealed a date range of 1028 to 1172 AD—nearly 500 years before the Money Pit was even rumored to have been constructed.
“If that well is really from the 11th century,” said Rick, “you gotta ask: What were people doing here that early? Templars? Norse explorers? We don’t know—but it changes everything.”
🔍 Clue #2: The Mysterious Circular Stone Depression – A Mirror of the Money Pit?
On newly acquired Lot 5, the team uncovered a perfectly circular stone depression, thirteen feet wide—the exact same dimension as the original Money Pit.
- Suspicious symmetry: Its nearly flawless circular shape raised immediate red flags.
- Historic context: Lot 5 previously belonged to the late treasure hunter Robert Young, who claimed to have found ancient coins and artifacts.
- Speculation: Could this be a decoy, or even a blueprint of the Money Pit itself?
“When you find something that’s geometrically identical to the original pit, it forces you to re-evaluate what you think you know,” Marty said. “It’s like a fingerprint—left behind by someone with a very specific plan.”
🌍 Ancient Roads, Old World Clues
Beyond structures, the team continues to unravel man-made features that mirror constructions found halfway around the world:
- A cobblestone road, stylistically linked to 2,000-year-old Portuguese builds.
- Repeated references to Templar influence, seafaring civilizations, and pre-Columbian transatlantic journeys.
“If there’s a Portuguese connection to the construction in the swamp,” said one expert, “then maybe we’ve found the blueprint.”
💥 Season 11: The Stakes Are Higher Than Ever
The Money Pit remains a top priority, with new wooden shafts being discovered—possibly indicating the real pit or other vaulted offshoots.
And while high-tech tools and archaeological rigor continue to guide the dig, the team never forgets the thrill of the chase:
“Where there’s muck, there’s treasure, mate.” – Gary Drayton
“Treasure Island, baby.” – Marty Lagina
⚖️ What Lies Ahead?
The new season promises to tackle not just the mystery of buried treasure, but an even greater question:
Who was here before Columbus? Before even Cabot or the French explorers?
With structures dating back nearly 1,000 years, and an island full of deliberately constructed oddities, the team is closer than ever to rewriting the known history of the Americas.
Tune in for the mind-blowing Season 11 premiere of The Curse of Oak Island—where each rock turned could be a page from a hidden chapter of human history.
Will this be the year they finally solve it?
Only the island knows.








