New Oak Island THEORIES That Are Actually True

New Oak Island THEORIES That Are Actually True

There’s one island
that has, um, like this crazy hole in the ground
that was made by pirates.

The treasure of Oak Island
has stumped hundreds of people
for over 200 years.

Today is the last day.
There’s no question about it.

For centuries, different people from all over the world
and from various walks of life
have voyaged to Oak Island
in hopes of finding this mysterious treasure.

Thanks to the Lagina brothers,
their team of experts,
and the universally loved TV show
The Curse of Oak Island,

viewers all over the world get to watch
as they’ve uncovered theories
that might actually be true.

What theories could be true on the island?
What secrets does the island hold?

Join us
as we explore some jaw-dropping theories about Oak Island
that were found to be strangely true.


The Aztec gold that was hidden.

The first astonishing theory about Oak Island
is related to the Aztecs.

Looking for treasure in the American Southwest,
particularly in modern-day Arizona.

In a recap of moments on The Curse of Oak Island,
John, one of the experts on the Lagina Brothers team, said:

“Before we try to find out what treasure is here,
we have to figure out who did the work on Oak Island.
I believe that this was the work of the Aztec Empire.”

He continued,

“I believe about 800 AD.
It was the Mayans who came ashore.”

He believed that the Mayans discovered
a special kind of clay in the sediments.
To the Mesoamericans,
this was worth more than all the gold in the world.

He said the South Shore shaft
was the first shaft to be put down to establish a mine.

The significance of the South Shore shaft
was that it was the first shaft put down
to establish a mine here.

The Aztecs found the blue clay they wanted.
They knew they could mine it.

They probably dug a shaft about eight feet round
and would have hit clay around fifty feet down.

It was all basic mining.
Ventilation would have had to run about three hundred feet,
which meant a hidden ventilation shaft.

So when the Aztecs went to the island
to hide their treasures,
they remodeled the old mine
and made it into a trap.

John kept saying,

“At the absolute bottom of Nolan’s Cross,
I believe the Aztec treasure is not here —
it’s just a couple hundred yards over there.”

And when the Aztecs came to hide the treasures,
they remodeled the mine
and made it into a trap —
the whole mine,
a trap.


The great Mesoamerican civilization
known as the Aztecs — or Mexica —
flourished in central Mexico
between the 14th and early 16th centuries.

Their tale is one of remarkable progress,
historical triumphs,
and a sudden collapse.

They most likely migrated to the Valley of Mexico
in the 13th century
after leaving northwest Mexico.

According to legend,
the Mexica built Tenochtitlan —
their capital city —
on an island in Lake Texcoco
after seeing a divine sign:
an eagle perched on a cactus,
eating a snake.

Tenochtitlan became
an architectural and engineering masterpiece.

In 1428,
the Mexica joined the Aztec Triple Alliance
with Texcoco and Tlacopan.

Together they expanded their empire
through conquest,
creating one of the most powerful civilizations
in the Americas.

They were expert administrators and fierce warriors.
Their emperor — the Huey Tlatoani — ruled over a society
rich in art, religion, and ritual.

Religion was central,
with gods, ceremonies,
and even human sacrifice shaping daily life.

Tenochtitlan prospered —
a vast marketplace,
temples,
canals,
and intricate art and trade.

But in 1519,
Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés arrived.

At first,
the Aztecs mistook the Spaniards for gods.
Cortés exploited rivalries among native tribes,
forging alliances
and eventually besieging Tenochtitlan in 1521.

Smallpox and superior weaponry
brought the empire to its knees.

The Aztec Empire fell,
and Spanish colonial rule began.

Yet their legacy endured —
in language, art, and architecture.

A civilization of brilliance,
power,
and tragedy.


So,
the Aztecs knew all about power and strategy.
Their dynasty came to an unfortunate end,
but their story still echoes through time.

What other strange theories
can we find on Oak Island?


The Enochian Chamber — the vault of spiritual secrets.

“When they first started to dig at the Money Pit,
the first thing they came across
a couple of feet under the turf
was a platform of flat stones.”

Author Alan Butler,
in a meeting with the Lagina brothers and their team,
introduced the theory of the Enochian Chamber.

He said it all came down
to connecting the dots.

Reading the account of Daniel McInnis
and his friends,
Butler noticed that
the first thing they hit under the surface
was a platform of flat stones.

He connected it
to a branch of Freemasonry
known as the Royal Arch of Enoch.

According to Masonic legend,
King Solomon built the Temple,
and within it
the Enochian chambers were discovered.

“And King Solomon builds the Temple.
They find the entrance to the Enochian chambers.”

Some say
the Ark of the Covenant
was ultimately hidden there.

Butler believed
the Money Pit was a deliberate replica
of Solomon’s Temple —
and of Enoch’s secret vault.

He thought another shaft and chamber existed,
positioned due west from the original point.


The Enochian Chamber,
or the Vault of the Adepts,
is a concept rooted deep
in Western esoteric history.

Linked to 16th-century scholar John Dee
and medium Edward Kelley,
the system claimed to record communications
with angels —
the Enochian language.

Crowley and the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn
later revived the practice,
building symbolic vaults
for ritual and transcendence.

Each chamber
was designed as a sacred space —
walls covered with sigils and angelic symbols,
a meeting point between heaven and earth.

To practitioners,
it was a place
to summon divine forces,
seek enlightenment,
or unlock hidden knowledge.

Could Oak Island’s buried shafts and chambers
be echoes of that same ancient design?


Founding Fathers and the Secret Connection.

Louis Alexandre Rochacourt —
the son of the Duke of Yanville —
had close ties to Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin.

“This next theory begins with a man called Louis Alexandre…
an interesting character
because of his associations with Jefferson and Franklin.”

It’s believed
he may have shared secret knowledge
about Oak Island with them.

If true,
it could mean the treasure
helped fund the American Revolution —
a hidden fortune
that shaped a nation.

Rick Lagina said,

“If there really is a connection to the Revolution,
it’s a national treasure for the United States —
and for Nova Scotia —
because the mystery was born there.”

The friendship between Franklin and Jefferson
was a bond that shaped history.

One, the diplomat and scientist.
The other, the philosopher and architect.

Together they embodied
reason and idealism —
the twin pillars of a new republic.

Their shared vision of liberty and self-governance
helped forge the American identity.

And perhaps,
just perhaps,
their secrets ran deeper
than anyone realized.


Zena Halpern’s Map and the Hidden Ciphers.

A researcher in New York,
Zena Halpern,
spent years studying the Templars.

She discovered a map dated 1347
that seemed to connect the Templars
to Oak Island.

It showed French labels —
“the basin,” “the marsh,” “the dam” —
and even a mark:
“oak enter here.”

There were also strange ciphers,
symbols similar to those found
on the famous 90-foot stone.

Zena claimed
it all tied back to African gold routes
and biblical figures like Joab,
a general under King David.

The Laginas debated her findings.
Some believed her.
Others doubted.

But one thing was certain —
the mystery deepened.


The Star Map Theory.

Astrophysicist Travis Taylor
joined the Laginas
with a startling idea.

He had found high levels of uranium near the island —
and when uranium decays,
it releases radon gas.

If a void lies underground,
radon would collect inside.
A hidden chamber,
waiting to be found.

Taylor also noticed
that nearly everyone involved
in the Oak Island story
was a Freemason.

He studied Masonic drawings —
the hand of God,
the chalice,
the “as above, so below” principle.

He overlaid a constellation map
onto Oak Island
and found that the seven stars of the Pleiades
aligned with large boulders on the ground.

“I don’t see any other large boulders like this around here.”
“Not just sitting there, right?”

Were these stones
ancient markers,
placed by design?

Marty Lagina asked,

“Could those stones be markers
that were put there long ago
to correspond with the star map?”


The Money Pit — and the Deepest Mystery.

During the age of pirates,
a group of young explorers
found strange wooden platforms
buried beneath the earth of Oak Island.

They kept digging —
10 feet,
20 feet,
30 —
until they uncovered
a stone marked with mysterious carvings.

At 90 feet,
a flood tunnel triggered,
filling the pit with seawater.

A booby trap.
A warning.
A secret meant to stay buried.

For more than two centuries,
people have returned to that same spot —
digging, drilling,
and hoping to solve the riddle.

Modern excavations revealed
Spanish coins,
old tools,
wooden structures,
and even human remains
from both Europe and the Middle East.

The evidence hints
at centuries of contact and construction —
Templar tunnels,
pirate vaults,
or something even older.

Each discovery
only raises more questions.

The pit resists every attempt
to reach its core —
flooding, collapsing,
guarding its secret.

Still,
the Lagina brothers push on.

Every scoop of earth,
every sonar scan,
every relic recovered —
each brings them one step closer
to what might be
the most legendary treasure in history.


Which theory do you believe?
The Aztec mine?
The Enochian vault?
The Founding Fathers’ secret?
The Templar map?
Or the star alignment that points to the unknown?

Whatever the truth,
the mystery of Oak Island endures —
a story still being written
beneath the soil
and under the waves.

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