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The Curse of Oak Island: Every Season Broken Down (So Far)

🏴‍☠️ 11 Seasons, Hundreds of Digs, and Still No Final Answer…

By Rukka NovaPublished 8 months ago • 4 min read

🏴‍☠️ 11 Seasons, Hundreds of Digs, and Still No Final Answer…

Since it first aired in 2014, The Curse of Oak Island has become the gold standard of unsolved mystery television.

With over a decade of relentless digging, evolving theories, heartbreak, triumphs, and more sonar scans than the average Navy base, the show has transformed from a niche treasure hunt into a global obsession.

Here’s your season-by-season breakdown of The Curse of Oak Island — including:

  • Key discoveries
  • Equipment used
  • New faces on the team

And how each season kept us guessing

🧭 Season 1 (2014): The Journey Begins

Major Discoveries:

  • First look at the Money Pit
  • Discovery of 17th-century coconut fiber
  • GPS mapping of existing boreholes

Equipment Used:

  • Ground-penetrating radar (GPR)
  • Basic excavation tools
  • Key Players Introduced:
  • Rick and Marty Lagina
  • Craig Tester, engineer
  • Dan Blankenship, legendary Oak Island searcher

Viewer Reception:

  • Modest initial ratings, but major cult buzz
  • People loved the authenticity of the brothers

🧭 Season 2 (2014–2015): Digging Deeper

Major Discoveries:

Pieces of old Spanish coin

Potential 90-foot stone location

Equipment Used:

Borehole drilling

Diving gear for swamp exploration

Key Players Introduced:

David Blankenship, Dan’s son

Charles Barkhouse, historian

Viewer Reception:

Ratings jumped — fans bought in

Criticisms arose around lack of conclusions

🧭 Season 3 (2015–2016): Wood, Parchment, and Theories

Major Discoveries:

Parchment with handwriting on it

Ancient leather fragments

Equipment Used:

High-pressure core drills

CT scanning

Key Players Introduced:

Jack Begley, researcher

Dan Henskee, longtime Blankenship team member

Viewer Reception:

First time viewers thought “This might be real”

Debates ignited over the “Templar connection”

🧭 Season 4 (2016–2017): The Knights Templar Season

Major Discoveries:

Lead cross found near Smith’s Cove

More old wood at extreme depths

Equipment Used:

Remote-operated vehicle (ROV) dives

Dendrochronology dating

Key Players Introduced:

Gary Drayton, metal detection expert

Viewer Reception:

Huge ratings bump thanks to Templar theory

Critics called it “Ancient Aliens with dirt”

🧭 Season 5 (2017–2018): The Season of Loss

Major Discoveries:

Human bones from different ethnic backgrounds

17th-century coins and iron nails

Equipment Used:

Deep borehole grid system

Lab analysis for DNA and carbon dating

Key Players Introduced:

More scientists, including Dr. Lori Verderame (artifact expert)

Tragedy:

Craig Tester’s son, Drake, passed away during production

Viewer Reception:

Emotional tone; the show matured

Audience respected the grief and persistence

🧭 Season 6 (2018–2019): The Smith’s Cove Excavation

Major Discoveries:

Wooden slipway structure

Stone drains possibly tied to flood tunnels

Equipment Used:

Full-scale excavation teams

Drone mapping

Key Players Introduced:

Return of Dan Blankenship footage and archival interviews

Viewer Reception:

Viewers praised the scale

Still frustrated by “almosts”

🧭 Season 7 (2019–2020): The Swamp Takes Center Stage

Major Discoveries:

Ship-shaped anomaly in the swamp

13th-century artifact from Europe

Equipment Used:

Ground-penetrating radar

Underwater LIDAR

Key Players Introduced:

Dr. Ian Spooner, geoscientist

Viewer Reception:

Swamp mystery drove record engagement

“Is it a ship?” theories trended for months

🧭 Season 8 (2020–2021): COVID Complications, Bigger Discoveries

Major Discoveries:

Large stone road in swamp

Ancient pine tar used in shipbuilding

Equipment Used:

Expanded archaeological digs

COVID protocols slowed production

Key Players Introduced:

Extended academic consultants

Viewer Reception:

Despite pandemic delays, fans stayed loyal

“Real progress” became a rally cry

🧭 Season 9 (2021–2022): New Tunnels, Old Secrets

Major Discoveries:

Massive tunnel system at 90–120 feet

Artifact possibly linked to Portuguese explorers

Equipment Used:

Muon tomography scanning

Advanced geoscanning tech

Viewer Reception:

Viewership surged again

Real sense of “nearing the end”

Skeptics noted increasingly “dragged” pacing

🧭 Season 10 (2022–2023): Everything Converges

Major Discoveries:

Additional tunnel leads near the Garden Shaft

Coins, nails, and scale weights from the 1600s

Equipment Used:

Water displacement tech

3D underground mapping

Key Players Introduced:

Further collaborations with universities

Viewer Reception:

Highest ratings since Season 5

Reddit and YouTube lit up with decode theories

🧭 Season 11 (2023–2024): The Garden Shaft & Final Countdown?

Major Discoveries:

Garden Shaft revealed to align with key historical coordinates

Rare ox shoe, potential shaft-side wall

Equipment Used:

Full mining shaft reconstruction

Subterranean live feeds

Key Players Introduced:

New archaeological teams and safety engineers

Viewer Reception:

Split: “This is the final dig” vs. “This is another stall”

Tension high as viewers demand resolution

🧠 So, What Have 11 Seasons Actually Proven?

After over a decade of searching:

  • Hundreds of historical artifacts have been unearthed
  • Advanced tech has mapped secret tunnels no one knew existed
  • International links to Europe, Africa, and South America have emerged

Still… no treasure chest. No gold bars. No final chamber. Yet.

But that’s the power of The Curse of Oak Island.

The discovery is always just one more borehole away.

🎯 Final Thoughts: More Than a Show — It’s a Saga

From a reader’s digest clipping in Rick Lagina’s childhood to an 11-season global phenomenon, The Curse of Oak Island has become far more than a treasure hunt.

It’s a living documentary, a multi-generational mystery, and a test of belief versus reality.

And with each passing season, more people ask the same question:

“What if this really is the year?”

📣 Call to Action

Binge-watched all 11 seasons? Still waiting for that final chamber?

Share this timeline with your favorite Oak Island fanatic — and follow me on Vocal.Media for breakdowns of treasure TV, lost history, and the shows that keep us digging.

Because some shows don’t just entertain.

They excavate legends.

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About the Creator

Rukka Nova

A full-time blogger on a writing spree!

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