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  • Here we are.

  • Ross Farms to get some answers.

  • Marty Laguna and his son Alex, along with metal detection expert Gary Drayton, travel once again to the Ross Farm Museum, located in the nearby town of New Ross, Nova Scotia.

  • Here we are.

  • Back again.

  • Yeah.

  • I love this place.

  • Hello?

  • Right back with more wonderful what you got today.

  • This came from over 100 feet below the ground.

  • You see, that is tape it on this end with a really sharp end on it.

  • Stopped far down in the money.

  • No idea.

  • Wow.

  • Idea what it is, what it was doing there kind of reminded me of a sailcloth needle on the first floor.

  • No, because the size of it, it has no practical purpose.

  • But I do know that in some sister ways and very rare, these were replaced as booby traps.

  • Wowser, huh?

  • Interesting.

  • Extremely.

  • I did not expect that.

  • No, A spike from a booby trap and found some 114 feet deep in the money pit area dating back literally thousands of years.

  • So called booby traps have been used by hunters to catch their prey.

  • They've also been used effectively in warfare and as a means of protecting everything from tombs and vaults to other locations which contains sacred objects or priceless valuables spoke here and someone else.

  • Would this be under the ground?

  • And I don't make sense, is it?

  • You know, because if you look right along this shoulder here looks like some sort of device was wrapped around that.

  • And then this part was driven or inserted into a wooden structure.

  • This was inserted up to here so that these would stick a maybe hundreds on interred in tow.

  • A plank are whatever sort of structure you wanted in so that it would cause a lot of damage to human flush.

  • Yeah, sure would.

  • If you stepped on that in what period?

  • In history.

  • I mean, days will be very old.

  • Yeah, I would probably say, um 15 to the middle 17 hundreds.

  • Wow.

  • A second booby trap on Oak Island.

  • What we were aware of was a flood.

  • Maybe there were other traps because we don't know much about the original excavation of the money pit.

  • So maybe Carmen legs, right.

  • Maybe there were other obstacles.

  • They got through and they just didn't I know them.

  • That's really quite amazing.

  • You know, I not envisioned that.

  • I would not have thought that.

  • No, but he's seen all kinds of stuff on, doesn't see another use for that.

  • And it's clearly made that way.

  • It is.

  • Didn't corrode that way.

  • Yeah, and this one here is very well preserved.

  • Just not really corroded.

  • Know, even to my eye.

  • You can look at the end and see that it's shaped.

  • It's made to be pointy.

  • Yes, yes.

  • It didn't curled like, uh, no, but I can't see that being any practical, common everyday told.

  • So you must have something really valuable.

  • You wanna protect?

  • Yeah.

  • Shop.

  • Remember every time I leave here, Carmen, I got a date.

  • Just what you told me.

  • Yeah, I think in part Because I imagine you do too, though, right?

  • Oh, yeah.

  • Good finds, Gary.

  • Yeah, well, hey, as always.

  • Thank you.

  • Very good.

  • Uh, sorry.

  • I keep giving you more questions.

  • And you know what, though?

  • It's always good, Carmen.

  • It's always a pleasure talking.

  • It really because of the wealth of knowledge you have is great.

  • I guarantee we'll be back our ears.

  • Thank you.

Here we are.

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オーク島の呪い。奇妙な発見はマネーピットへとつながる(後編) (シーズン7) |歴史 (The Curse of Oak Island: STRANGE DISCOVERY LEADS TO MONEY PIT (Part 2) (Season 7) | History)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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