Oak Island aerial view showing the mysterious Money Pit location

What happened on Oak Island?


The world’s longest treasure hunt.

The Season 13 Verdict
The Investigation · Season 13

The Season 13 Verdict

A Portuguese coin struck no later than 1371, carbon dates on swamp leather reaching into the 1100s, and a stone foundation the stars place around 1236. The full case, laid out finding by finding.

Season 14 Is Filming Now
Filming Started June 1, 2026 · 25 Episodes · Premieres November 3, 2026

Season 14 Is Filming Now

Twenty-five new episodes premiere November 3, 2026, with filming on the island now underway. Where the dig left off, the questions Season 13 left open, and what the team is chasing next.

The Money Pit excavation site
01
Chapter One

The Money Pit

In 1795, three boys discovered a mysterious circular depression on a small island off Nova Scotia. What they found beneath would spark the world's longest treasure hunt.

Map of Oak Island excavation sites
Interactive Map

Oak Island, The Map

Oak Island sits in Mahone Bay, on the south shore of Nova Scotia. Barely 140 acres, it holds countless excavation sites from 231 years of digging, from the Money Pit and Smith's Cove to the Swamp and Nolan's Cross. Each location is mapped with the finds, articles, and episodes tied to it.

Historical treasure hunting equipment and excavation
02
Chapter Two

Over 230 Years of Searching

Countless expeditions. Millions spent. Lives lost. From early treasure companies to modern technological operations, the search has never stopped.

Knights Templar cross and ancient artifacts
03
Chapter Three

What Could Be Buried?

Templar treasure. Pirate gold. Shakespeare's lost manuscripts. The Menorah. The Ark of the Covenant. Marie Antoinette's jewels. The theories are as extraordinary as the engineering.

Artifacts discovered on Oak Island
04
Chapter Four

The Proof

Oak platforms at precise intervals. 13th century Coconut fiber from the Caribbean. Roman coins. Bone fragments carbon-dated to the Middle Ages. The evidence is mounting.

When Oak Island's dated finds were made 200 CE 500 1000 1500 1900 ANTIQUITY COLONIAL Medieval Colonial peak 1795 discovery
The Proof

What the Data Shows

Every scientifically dated find on the island, plotted across its full date range, produces two peaks: one in the 1200s, one in the 1700s.

The colonial peak around 1700 is not hard to account for, given two centuries of recorded activity on the island. The medieval cluster is the harder problem. More than twenty finds carry dates in the Middle Ages, a concentration with no parallel elsewhere in North America. If those dates hold, they describe activity on Oak Island five centuries before its recorded discovery, and that is the question any solution to the mystery has to answer.

The Curse of Oak Island television series filming
The Show

History Channel Series

Since 2014, millions have followed Rick and Marty Lagina's quest to solve the 230-year-old mystery once and for all.

There's a story buried on that island that I want to figure out. That's the real treasure.

— Rick Lagina, 2014