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Monday, November 21, 2005

MONEY PIT



For sale: Oak Islands buried mystery

Oak Island, in Nova Scotia, is famous for its Money Pit, a mystery that has endured two centuries, claimed six lives and swallowed up millions in life savings.
The Pit was discovered in 1795 by a local boy named Daniel McGinnis who, spotting an unusual clearing in the earth under one of the island's oak trees, was prompted to start digging. The discovery of layered planks, mysterious stone slabs, and mats made of coconut fibers descending deep into the ground turned his casual afternoon dig into an all-out excavation.
What appears to be a complex flooding trap has thwarted efforts to reach the bottom of the Money Pit ever since. Some think the pit was purposely flooded with seawater, via a series of artificial swamps and tunnels, to hide its contents.
Through the murk, drill borings and shafts dug by the island's series of owners have detected what seem to be cement vaulting, wooden chests, and scraps of parchment paper. Radiocarbon dating of these artifacts is consistent: whoever constructed the shaft likely did so sometime in the 16th Century.

[Oak Island's current owners, Dan Blankenship and David Tobias, have worked on the island since the 1960s, sinking millions of dollars into the project and revealing some intriguing clues of their own. For many who follow Oak Island developments, their abandonment of the treasure comes as a surprise. As recently as December of 2003, Blankenship told the Halifax Herald that he would announce some new, exciting findings in the following months. The revelation never came.]

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Good story, but...
- "a mystery that has endured two centuries" Do you any evidence of that?
- "The Pit was discovered in 1795 by a local boy named Daniel McGinnis" No, McGinnis was a farmer on the island.
- "discovery of layered planks, mysterious stone slabs..." I don't think so. Do you have any evidence to support these wild claims?
- "a complex flooding trap" No, there was no such thing.
- " thwarted efforts to reach the bottom of the Money Pit ever since" No. Dunfield dug out the pit in 1965.
- "Through the murk, drill borings and shafts dug by the island's series of owners have detected what seem to be cement vaulting, wooden chests, and scraps of parchment paper." Any evidence of that?
- "Radiocarbon dating of these artifacts is consistent: whoever constructed the shaft likely did so sometime in the 16th Century." Nonsense. No artefact has provenance, no process has been dated, no archaeology has ever been conducted or found.

Do you always just repeat other people's bullshit? Or do you make up your own?