Was Oak Island Used in 1525? Stunning Swamp Evidence Says Yes
Season 13, Episode 5: Why “Keep on Rocking” Might Rewrite the History of Oak Island
A Season-Changing Moment
If there’s one thing The Curse of Oak Island has proven after 13 seasons, it’s that the island rarely reveals anything easily. But every so often, the mud settles and the team finds something that challenges the accepted timeline of North American history.
Episode 5, Keep on Rocking, appears to be one of the most important episodes in years—possibly a pivot point for the entire mystery.
The preview and official episode description make one thing clear:
History is no longer speculation. It’s finally becoming physical, datable evidence.
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A 500-Year-Old Swamp Find Changes Everything
The Swamp Strikes Again — and This Time With a Date
For years, the swamp has been the “wild card” of Oak Island: natural, engineered, or something in between?
In Episode 5, the team finally obtains a date that forces historians to take notice.
The episode description states:
“After a find in the swamp proves to be at least 500 years old…”
A 500-year-old object places activity at 1525 — nearly 300 years before the discovery of the Money Pit.
Possible Origins:
- Spanish explorers or conquistadors safeguarding wealth
- Portuguese expeditions, including the Corte-Real brothers
- Early French navigators
- Templar-connected Order of Christ voyages
A structure from 1525 suggests planned activity, not random shipwreck debris, strengthening theories that Oak Island was a strategic site, not a colonial accident.
Lot 5: The New Epicenter of Activity
Another Man-Made Stone Structure—But Why?
Lot 5 has rapidly evolved from background territory to one of the island’s most information-rich zones.
The preview includes the striking line:
“Somebody piled those stones. Somebody went to some trouble.”
What a Stone Structure Could Mean:
- A foundation for unknown operations
- A navigational marker, like Nolan’s Cross
- A vault cover or hidden entryway
- A military fortification
- A processing area used during an expedition
Stone doesn’t lie. People don’t build stone structures on a remote island without purpose.
![The Curse Of Oak Island | Season 13 Episode 5 Preview [2025]](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/YIkZRTrj-Ko/hq720.jpg?sqp=-oaymwEhCK4FEIIDSFryq4qpAxMIARUAAAAAGAElAADIQj0AgKJD&rs=AOn4CLAfpX5cfmCEnrcTV9n2WZFYojSSFA)
A 1500s Hand Cannon: The Detail That Changes the Entire Story
Military Presence, Not Just Treasure Hunters
Perhaps the most explosive preview moment is this line:
“It could be a 1500’s hand cannon. They were right here.”
A hand cannon is not a tool of commerce or farming.
It is:
- A weapon
- A sign of organized personnel
- Evidence of conflict, security, or treasure protection
Why This Is Historic
A 16th-century firearm ties perfectly to the swamp dating.
It also supports the theory that Oak Island was used by:
- Portuguese Order of Christ navigators
- Spanish military sailors
- Secretive European operatives transporting treasure
If verified, this weapon leaps the Oak Island timeline back into the Age of Exploration, not the era of pirates.
“Treasure Central”: A Convergence of Clues
Evidence Is No Longer Scattered — It’s Connecting
The preview includes the statement:
“Well, this is the neighborhood… this is treasure central.”
This suggests the team is triangulating:
- Swamp dating
- Stone architecture on Lot 5
- A 1500s weapon
- Gold and silver trace elements in water samples
This is the closest the team has come to identifying a single, unified operational zone on the island.
What Episode 5 Really Means
The Working Theory:
- A European expedition arrived around 1520–1550
- Used the swamp as a landing zone or harbor
- Built infrastructure on Lot 5
- Carried weapons, implying danger or competition
- Deposited or safeguarded high-value treasure
- Left before colonial records began
This is not pirate activity.
This is organized engineering and defense.
Why “Keep on Rocking” Matters
The episode title reflects both:
- The literal stone structures being unearthed
- The forward momentum of discoveries stacking together
Episode 5 appears ready to push the Oak Island narrative away from folklore and into hard, datable, indisputable history.
If the hand cannon and swamp artifacts are authenticated, Season 13 may become the season where Oak Island stops being a mystery—and starts being a historical revelation.
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