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  • 5/29/2025
The Death Coast S01E06

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00:00Captions by GetTranscribed.com
00:21Top side, just circling around the area.
00:24Be careful down there now.
00:30There's something under here.
00:34Diego, what do you have over there?
00:38Digging a bit here. Hold on.
00:46Top side, you're gonna love this.
00:49What's going on, pal?
00:51We just found another coin.
00:54Keep digging, then. There must be more.
00:57It's known as the Death Coast.
01:01An area of rough sea in the North Atlantic
01:05that's claimed more than 6,000 vessels.
01:08Casting those aboard, and treasure,
01:12into its turbulent depths.
01:14We gotta turn this thing around.
01:16Here we go!
01:18Gold, silver, and other priceless objects
01:24from the wrecked ships...
01:25Oh, my God. You're not gonna believe this.
01:27...lie scattered across the ocean floor.
01:30Gold coin right there.
01:31That is gorgeous.
01:32But salvaging here has been banned
01:35for more than a decade,
01:37thanks to rampant looting.
01:39Now...
01:41Storm is a-brewin'.
01:44Oh, boy!
01:47After a long battle,
01:49third-generation shipwreck hunter Jeff McKinnon
01:52has won the exclusive rights
01:53to dive in these treacherous waters.
01:56Yeah!
01:57But he only has eight weeks to do it.
02:00Are you okay?
02:01Can Jeff and his team find the treasure he seeks...
02:05Find me something!
02:06...before the stormy waters of the Death Coast?
02:08It's time for us to get out of here.
02:10Pull him out. What are we doing?
02:11What are we doing?
02:12...make diving impossible.
02:28For the past week,
02:29the team has been diving in the treacherous waters
02:31off the coast of Scattery Island.
02:33Now, Jeff McKinnon gathers his team at base camp
02:39to reveal their most extraordinary find to date.
02:47We've located something
02:48that I certainly wasn't expecting
02:50when we began to clean some of the concretion
02:53you all brought up.
02:54I've gotten used to a lot of things,
02:56but I still haven't gotten used to these.
02:58I told you.
03:02Jeff?
03:03What do you think?
03:04You got treasure, Jeff.
03:05Oh, yeah.
03:06Those are emeralds.
03:08The team has been on the hunt for the Neptune,
03:10one of four ships from a British convoy
03:12to sink in these waters in 1711.
03:15Of the four ships,
03:16the Neptune became the priority target
03:18after discovering it had a powder magazine aboard.
03:21Looks like we have about five foot piece of timber,
03:26copper sheeting on it.
03:28And a letter of mark,
03:31a royal decree granting the ship
03:33the right to set upon by force of arms
03:36other enemy vessels.
03:38Together, these finds suggest
03:40that the Neptune might have been carrying treasure
03:43when it sank.
03:44Then, another discovery.
03:48Across the top side,
03:49I have a big piece of concretion.
03:52Inside the concretion,
03:56Jim uncovered a once-in-a-lifetime find.
03:59Holy .
04:01What are those?
04:02Emeralds.
04:03Amazing.
04:04Unreal.
04:05They're pretty, aren't they?
04:06But that seals it.
04:10Just an FYI, guys,
04:11Mike and I were down in Florida not too far back
04:13and we went to a museum
04:14that had emeralds from the Atocha
04:16and they were selling them
04:17and they had price tags on them.
04:19Those stones down there
04:20that didn't look a whole lot different than these
04:22were going for anywhere between
04:23six, eight, ten, twelve thousand dollars.
04:26What?
04:27For one gold stone, yeah.
04:28How many is there, Jim?
04:30Twelve thousand dollars for one of them?
04:32Yeah.
04:33Fourteen.
04:34Sixteen.
04:35Sixteen times twelve thousand is what?
04:37Quite a bit.
04:38I don't have my calculator.
04:39Sorry.
04:40Okay.
04:41So if they're ten thousand a piece,
04:42that's one hundred and sixty thousand dollars
04:43worth of emeralds.
04:44There you go.
04:45You know, this is just a sign of things to come.
04:47Who knows what else could be down there?
04:49But that, there, that's treasure.
04:52That is a good sign.
04:53That's what we're here for
04:54and that's what we're going to continue to find.
04:56Jeff, I've been diving forty-eight years
04:58and I can count on one hand number of guys
05:00that found precious stones diving.
05:02Oh, you're just saying that because you know
05:03you've found them.
05:04That's right.
05:05Now I know one more.
05:06That's the wrecks we're having here.
05:08You're not talking about treasure wrecks.
05:09You're talking about payroll ships.
05:10You're talking about warships.
05:11You're talking about supply ships.
05:14You're not finding emeralds in Canada.
05:16You're not finding emeralds in the United States.
05:18Not at this period anyway.
05:19No, not at all.
05:20So the only place that was producing emeralds
05:22in this time frame was the Spanish
05:25down in Central and South America.
05:27The Neptune apparently was spending quite a bit of time
05:30down in the Caribbean.
05:31Yeah, probably doing some privateering.
05:33Yeah, you never know what they were up to.
05:38Privateers were private ships given permission
05:40to attack enemy ships and seize cargo during wartime.
05:45In the early 1700s, to help pay for the expensive
05:48war of Spanish succession, British privateers were encouraged
05:52to target Spanish treasure ships in the Caribbean.
05:58This is the product of one, one foot long concretion
06:02in a football field size area of concretions.
06:06Jeff, if we can identify the actual shipwreck positively,
06:09that changed the provenance altogether on these stones
06:11and magnifies the value of them monumentally.
06:14All right, let's go and prove to the world
06:16what ship these did come from.
06:18The next day, Jeff and the team head straight back
06:35to Scattery Island and the concretion field
06:38where the emeralds were discovered.
06:40That hole is right friggin' through there.
06:43No, I know, I can see it.
06:48Well, here we go again.
06:49Wind.
06:50Southwest wind.
06:53A southwest wind comes straight up the coastline
06:55and makes it sloppy with the waves.
06:57And when the current picks up, it gets way worse.
07:00Let's see what we can find.
07:06Keep digging.
07:10Good to go, Chris?
07:11Yeah, good to go.
07:17All right, PZO, you're clear.
07:23If there's emeralds, then what else could be
07:25in that concretion, I can only imagine.
07:28And I'm going to find out what it is.
07:30That's the treasure hunter inside of me.
07:32That's what's talking now.
07:45I got you loud and clear, Haas.
07:49Yeah, go find me a coin.
07:56I'm going to move over to the right,
07:57so I'm a little bit away from you guys on the other side,
07:59down into this other crack.
08:00There you go.
08:01Let's not sprint too far.
08:11Divers are searching the concretion field,
08:13looking for anything that they can pry from the sea floor.
08:18Let's head north.
08:21It's going to get worse.
08:25But the combination of the swell above, the currents,
08:29and the rocky bottom make for a difficult dive.
08:35The current's picking up down here.
08:38On this coastline, you've got to be on your game,
08:41because one mistake and you're dead.
08:48Heading west.
08:49Copy that, Pizio. Copy that.
08:54Winds are picking up just after lunch.
08:58Yeah.
09:01My divers need to find something fast,
09:03because this weather is not our friend.
09:05Strong hit here.
09:23Oh, fantastic.
09:24What is it?
09:26Not sure.
09:28Can't quite see it yet.
09:35Guided by the metal detector,
09:38diver Mike Pizio has to manually dig the item out of the crevice.
09:43Keep searching, pal.
09:48Found something here.
09:50Top side, you're going to like this.
09:59Coming up.
10:01The storm's heading our way, fellas.
10:05As the weather continues to get worse.
10:08Top side, the current down here is insane.
10:11And the diving more dangerous.
10:12Go get him before he hits those rocks.
10:15Top side, I have something.
10:17You think there's a shipwreck?
10:18Yeah.
10:20The team discovers a collection of mysterious items.
10:23Holy moly.
10:25Wow.
10:27That's definitely a ballast pile.
10:29Top side, I believe I have a coin.
10:32We just found another coin.
10:34Attaboy!
10:36There is one of these shipwrecks here.
10:37In the treacherous waters of the Death Coast,
10:51near the western breakers of Scattery Island,
10:54diver Mike Pizio has made a discovery.
10:58Top side, you're going to like this.
11:01Okay, I want you to bring that up.
11:04Pizio leaving bottom.
11:05Copy, copy.
11:07Pizio's leaving bottom.
11:11Let's see!
11:16Where's my stern line?
11:18You could have just handed it to me.
11:20Yeah.
11:21Holy moly.
11:22I don't know what that is.
11:23Look at that.
11:25I don't know the size of that.
11:33That is something.
11:34That is incredible.
11:36This is...
11:37Yeah, I want to know what this is.
11:39Between us, we have over a hundred years of combined experience treasure hunting.
11:44But none of us have ever seen anything like this.
11:47What the ?
11:49These were in two different holes.
11:51Two different sizes.
11:53Mm-hmm.
11:56That is fantastic, guys.
11:59That being said, go get more.
12:00I want it all.
12:01The wind, you pick it up.
12:15Yeah, they may only be able to get a dive in today.
12:17So if they're going to find something, they should get it done early.
12:20See, you had a calm condition this morning, and now you've got about 30 knots blowing here.
12:24This is why it's dangerous to dive these waters.
12:28I want to dive these waters.
12:29There it is in pits.
12:30As the divers continue their search for treasure near the western breakers, the weather is fast closing in.
12:39as the divers continue their search for treasure near the western breakers
12:53the weather is fast closing in this is the same reef that sunk the feversham and her convoy if
13:02there's a big swell even the most skilled divers can get tossed up out of the rocks this could
13:07really be a dangerous situation diver Mike Pizzio returns to the same spot that he found the small
13:24metal triangle topside region get that thing dug up quick bring it up I repeat bring it up you never
13:50know what's going to turn up when you're treasure hunting and you definitely don't know where it's
13:55going to lead you dive her up dive her up with the wind and waves picking up Mike Pizzio brings back
14:11a second triangle guys what I got his big brother I got his big brother I don't know what it is but
14:21I got two of them now there's writing on it see it yeah yeah you're right but they were obviously
14:27a set of these things so that means there's probably a bunch more in your spot there I think
14:34we're really on to something here with the wind now too strong to dive again Jeff calls it a day
14:43all right Johnny starter up let's get out of here ready to go yeah that's disheartening this weather
14:51here this is just a taste in a couple of weeks time this is going to get real bad and that means that
14:58every dive now counts and every day counts that evening Jeff gathers the team to discuss the mysterious
15:13triangles and talk about their next move I don't know what they are I have no clue I've never seen
15:20anything like them I've been doing shipwrecks for a long time but I think I can't figure out what they
15:24are either like Jim been in the water for 50 years diving shipwrecks we used to have a joke saying I
15:30don't know what it is but it's a very nice example of one okay so we don't know where they are so what
15:36I try to determine at that point okay well what have you got this is from a shipwreck we are assuming so
15:42are they part of a nautical part of the ship or are they part of cargo that are made out of bronze
15:48or some sort of brass bronze very indicative of maritime stuff okay because it doesn't rust
15:54I'm thinking well maybe more part of the ship or something used on the ship triangles are used in
16:01navigational terms we're using on that maps but these edges are rounded they're not sharp and flat like
16:08you would use on a nautical chart to draw a line 300 years ago they might have been sharper the other
16:13thing is they're not equilateral triangles they're isosceles right two equal sides yeah two sides are
16:19equal y so y right what would be the function of that maybe some sort of distance measurement like
16:24if I put one here yeah one's there on many ships there was a compass that was in what they called
16:32a binnacle box and down in the bottom of the compass there was a counterweight that they would often put
16:37in could these be a counterweight for a compass I don't know but you know it's it's just another
16:43another theory right now you know you got like 250 years worth of diving standing at this table right
16:49now and nobody here has seen anything like this so it's an enigma to say the least I'm searching for
16:58treasure and we find these weird triangles as a treasure hunter you never turn your nose up at what
17:03you find because you never know what it's trying to tell you any way you could get those tested and see
17:09if you could talk to some people and figure out what they are yep these triangles were found where
17:14we were finding other treasure and I don't believe in coincidences I don't know what they are but I mean
17:20to find out
17:32the next day as the winds die back down boy what a day jeff and the team returned to yesterday
17:39site where diver mike pizzio recovered the mystery triangles
17:46okay let's go
17:51this is like a brand new day here but it is a race against time and weather so goodbye
18:00it takes hard work moderately good weather and a little bit of luck and that's what treasure hunting is
18:06all about go make yourselves useful
18:17let's start heading this way copy that right behind you
18:22i know that there are more coins and artifacts down there and with this break in the weather i'm going
18:35to make hay while the sun shines let's make this die worth something
18:43not seeing anything yet find me something please
18:48while the team looks for new artifacts archaeologist jim sinclair is looking for answers
19:05i have a hunch that these triangles are weights but i've never seen anything like them before so we need
19:10someone who has so jim has reached out to jan gillenbach jan is an expert in the science of measurement
19:18and the author of the encyclopedia of historical metrology weights and measures
19:22we've got two triangular pieces one of them weighed seven ounces that's the smaller of the two
19:31and then we also have this piece which is a 32 ounce triangle yeah i consider there are types of weights
19:41likely used as commercial use such for trades and calibration it was very common indeed to have
19:48those kind of equipment on the ships i have never seen these triangular pieces like this used as weights
19:55before so they're they're new to me the design is quite rare usually they are rectangular was very
20:02common it's a design thing it has nothing to do with the use of it if you were to conjecture as
20:08to what country of origin these would be from what would you think it's definitely not spanish it's
20:15not portuguese of course it's not the weight they used the 32 ounces uh it fits very well with
20:23the about what used when britain went around the world and during the late 17th century and beyond
20:31since the middle ages the avoirdupois system had been used to measure weights including units of
20:37ounces and pounds in the 16th century queen elizabeth the first made it the imperial system of measurement
20:43for england and its empire until the year 1965 when it adopted the metric system
20:51so it's definitely british and the the small one is probably used for precious metals that's
20:59fascinating to me and if you were going to be weighing something that was uh extremely valuable
21:05yeah uh you know precious metals gems things of that sort you'd probably want
21:11you know at least the smaller weight and possibly smaller than this yes yeah they wanted to to be
21:17very precise with those small weights well that's that's that's very encouraging
21:29back at the site where the strange triangles were found you boys being productive down there
21:34there the divers continue their search in the rocky crevices hoping to locate the neptune's bounty
21:44topside busy out just been 19 minutes digging out more iron more iron huh topside stuff's just all in
21:55different areas
22:08dig it up mike i want to know what it is
22:10oh they're getting excited down there now see they're into stuff and they know it
22:35yes
22:43topside this is drago i have another large piece of lead shaving
22:49you've got the lead shaving too
22:52drain shape with a fall through it i'll bring it up okay pal bring it to daddy
22:58Dan's on his way up there, fellas.
23:03Mike Haas and Pizio, that's time.
23:05I want you guys out of the water.
23:13Pizio, surfacing.
23:24Well, well, well.
23:25Let's see what we got here.
23:26See that there?
23:28Look.
23:29Lead patches.
23:34There is one of these shipwrecks here.
23:37Yeah.
23:40Coming up.
23:44We're going to toss around pretty good.
23:48Diver up!
23:49Go get him before he hits those rocks.
23:53Top side, I believe I have a coin.
23:57Did you say a coin?
23:59We just found another coin.
24:01Check this out.
24:05Holy frig, another one.
24:07While searching off the coast of Cape Breton, Nova Scotia for the convoy ship Neptune, the team discovers a possible clue.
24:25Well, well, well, let's see what we got here.
24:31Lead patches.
24:33There is one of these shipwrecks here.
24:35Wooden sailing ships were prone to shipwrecks.
24:37Wooden sailing ships were prone to shipwrecks caused by marine mollusks eating away the wooden structure of the hull.
24:42In an effort to prevent a ship from becoming unseaworthy, pieces of sheathing, which in the early 18th century were often made of lead, were used to patch up the hulls of ships that were badly in need of repair.
24:57So you've still got stuff there?
25:00They're still there.
25:02Material there.
25:03We're getting closer to something.
25:04I'm not going to be satisfied until I get some answers here as to what ship these came from.
25:12Okay, let's get re-tanked and get the f*** out of here.
25:15As Jeff sends the divers back out to the site, the winds begin to pick up.
25:21Well, here we go again.
25:23Wind.
25:26The storm's heading our way, fellas.
25:28Copy that.
25:29As the divers descend back down, they face new obstacles.
25:36The current has stirred up the sediment, and the visibility is low.
25:42So murky, you can't even see 10 feet.
25:45Okay, we've got to spread out a little bit.
25:47We're interfering with the metal detectors.
25:50Topside, just so that you know, I'm heading at 80 degrees towards the shore.
25:56Yeah, Dan, copy that.
26:00Make sure you take it slow.
26:05Topside, if you see bubbles close to the shore, trying to cut through a little area.
26:12He's right near the rocks.
26:14It's a rugged piece of coastline, that's for sure.
26:22Been in 22 minutes.
26:23Topside, I got a hit.
26:27I'm digging it now.
26:30Copy that.
26:31Copy that.
26:32Good luck.
26:34Not seeing anything yet.
26:38Topside.
26:40There was nothing in there.
26:44Topside.
26:45Visibility is not great at the moment.
26:47It's hard to get a clear look, but it looks like I found a bunch of what appears to be rocks.
26:57They're strangely all relatively the same shape and size.
27:03Here I am looking for treasure, and Mike Pizzio is finding rocks.
27:07I'm not looking for rocks.
27:11Topside, I'm coming across the same thing.
27:15Find me a coin.
27:16It looks like a pile of these stones, all in this area.
27:24It's hard to tell what they are.
27:32This is Griego, low on air.
27:35Have them ready to pick me up.
27:38Griego, cross to here.
27:39They're on their way, Dan.
27:45On their way.
27:48Haas is surfacing.
27:50Copy that, Haas.
27:51Copy that.
27:55Pizzio and Topside.
27:57Safety surface.
27:58Get a little low on air.
27:59You're good, Pizzio.
28:00You're good, Pizzio.
28:01They're coming to get you.
28:04Slow, slow, slow.
28:06You still got one more guy.
28:09Where's the zone yet?
28:12Do you see where Pizzio's at?
28:15No.
28:17Pizzio, do you copy?
28:19Copy that, copy that.
28:27Finally, with his tank almost empty, Pizzio surfaces.
28:31The divers come back safe, but empty-handed.
28:37Nothing?
28:38Nothing.
28:39It kills me to have to leave, but it's getting late in the day.
28:43We have no choice.
28:50That evening, Jeff and Jim get back in touch with Graham Christie,
28:54an underwater surveyor with McElhenney.
28:57Earlier in the season, Graham did a survey of the area for Jeff
29:01using Norbit's cutting-edge sonar technology
29:03to map the surface of the seafloor
29:06in an attempt to find any anomalies.
29:10Now Jeff wants to see if the data Graham got
29:13can provide any further insights into the area they just dove.
29:18All right.
29:18I think I found something pretty interesting to show you.
29:21Well, let's have a look.
29:23Well, we've got this sort of large area of sandy,
29:26sort of flat bottom,
29:28and there's a pretty big pile of rocks here.
29:30Now, taking a look around the surrounding area,
29:32there's not really any other piles of rocks,
29:35so it looks a little bit unusual.
29:38Well, I mean, you know, having lived in Florida for as long as I have
29:43in a place that had virtually no rocks,
29:45when we saw rocks in a sandy bottom,
29:47you know, that made us think right away
29:49that we're looking at part of the ballast of a ship.
29:52Yeah.
29:52So same sort of thing here.
29:54If we've got nothing but a flat, sandy bottom,
29:56and then you've got suddenly a pile of rock showing up,
30:00sure could be part of a ship.
30:03Ballast is heavy material that's stored in the bottom of a ship
30:06to increase stability by lowering its center of gravity
30:09and preventing it from toppling over.
30:12The most common type of ballast
30:14are stones cut into similar sizes,
30:17so they can be easily stacked.
30:21Yeah, can you zoom right in there
30:22and give me a measurement on one of the rocks?
30:25Yeah, for sure.
30:26Should be roughly around 8 inches, 9 inches.
30:30Yeah, that's right about what they are.
30:32They sort of range from about 8 inches to about a foot.
30:37Wow.
30:38Yeah, they're stackable.
30:39Yeah.
30:39That's definitely a ballast pile.
30:41If this is ballast,
30:43it means that we could be on the site
30:45of one of the transport ships.
30:47We just need to find out what shipwreck it is.
30:59The next day starts out with bad news.
31:02As Jeff and the team head back out
31:04to where the possible ballast pile is,
31:07weather reports indicate Hurricane Ernesto
31:10is on a crash course with the Death Coast.
31:13Time is running out.
31:15Hurricane season is coming,
31:17and when hurricane season starts,
31:20we're basically shut down.
31:27All right, so if we come down here
31:30and we make our way down around these breakers,
31:32I think we're going to be into something.
31:34I know there's more there.
31:36Let's have a look.
31:38Careful of that rock, Chris.
31:40It's a big one.
31:42Their search area is moving ever closer to shore
31:45and Scattery Island's jagged rocks.
31:57While the team looks for new artifacts,
32:00Jim Sinclair is looking for answers.
32:04He's taking the mysterious triangles
32:06for analysis in the lab.
32:08So, Lucas, we'd like you to test these.
32:11Brilliant.
32:12Lucas Evans is an XRF technician
32:15with the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences
32:18at Acadia University.
32:20Wow.
32:21We're going to have to do some tests
32:23to get the elemental analysis
32:25of what makes up these two triangles,
32:27and perhaps that way we can figure out
32:30what these triangles are actually used for.
32:31Those look pretty alien.
32:35They do, don't they?
32:37This is a great application for the XRF.
32:39I'll bring it over.
32:39Let's give it a go.
32:40Oh, that'd be great.
32:42The XRF detector sends
32:44an electromagnetic beam onto the triangle.
32:47And we'll start with the big one?
32:48Oh, yeah, sure.
32:51Just as a reminder,
32:52when the red light comes on, it's X-rays,
32:53and our distance is good here, so...
32:56Right.
32:57Off we go.
32:58X-rays on.
32:58This causes the molecules in the triangle
33:02to release fluorescent X-rays.
33:05These are like chemical fingerprints,
33:07allowing Lucas to determine precisely
33:10which chemical elements are present.
33:13So...
33:14For that one,
33:1634% lead,
33:1824% iron,
33:1920% copper,
33:21and some other small...
33:24that are still significant amounts
33:26of tin and antinomy.
33:28Typical in brass and bronze.
33:32Finding iron on these triangles
33:34that appeared to be brass or bronze
33:36really isn't all that surprising.
33:39The triangles were found
33:40on top of a bed of concretion,
33:42which is made up of iron
33:44that corrodes in the salty ocean water.
33:47As it corrodes,
33:48traces of iron are deposited
33:50on nearby objects.
33:52Let's try the small one.
33:54Brilliant.
33:54All right, let's give it a go.
33:55And X-rays on.
34:02All right.
34:03So...
34:04On the small triangle,
34:06we're looking at...
34:0844% lead,
34:1033% copper,
34:139% tin,
34:154% antinomy,
34:16and there's some silver in here.
34:23Definitely silver.
34:25Oh, that's interesting.
34:27Is it penetrating this piece
34:29to any degree
34:30or is it just really
34:31what's on the surface?
34:32The way that the beam works
34:33is there's only a little bit
34:34of penetration,
34:35so it could just be
34:36absolutely surface contamination.
34:38I think it's well
34:38within the realm of possibility
34:39that you've got silver
34:41sitting out there
34:41and that it was sitting
34:42like that in situ.
34:43When exposed to seawater,
34:46silver corrodes
34:47due to a process
34:48called ionization.
34:50Tiny ions of silver
34:52dissolve in the water
34:53and can leave
34:54an almost undetectable residue
34:56of silver sulfide
34:57on any surrounding objects.
35:01Well, so this could have been
35:02sitting in the middle
35:03of a pile of silver coins,
35:05picked up a little bit
35:05of silver sulfide,
35:06and that's what's showing up
35:07on the machine?
35:08Absolutely.
35:09Having silver nearby
35:10and sitting on top,
35:11coating that small triangle,
35:13100% within the realm
35:14of possibility.
35:16Our small triangle
35:18showed up trace element silver
35:20as part of its makeup.
35:21Could mean there's
35:22a whole lot more silver
35:23down there yet to be found.
35:26Back at Scattery Island,
35:28the divers are getting closer
35:30to the hazards
35:31of the rocky shoreline.
35:37We're in pretty shallow water.
35:39We're getting tossed
35:40around pretty good.
35:41All right.
35:46Peaseo, lead the way.
35:49All right, follow me.
35:51Master Peaseo,
35:53right behind you.
36:00All right, topside,
36:01get my first hit.
36:03This is topside.
36:04Dig it up.
36:05Yeah, topside,
36:09I just dug this down.
36:11I got a big piece of iron
36:12that's welded into the rock.
36:15Keep searching, pal.
36:17Here's you and, uh,
36:19Dan and Mike.
36:20How you guys doing?
36:21I'm definitely not seeing
36:23anything down here.
36:24You guys have any hits yet?
36:26That's a negative.
36:28Hang on.
36:29Off the topside,
36:30I have a hit.
36:32What do you got?
36:32I will be attesting
36:34to dig it out.
36:43Topside, I believe
36:45I have a coin.
36:48Did you say a coin?
36:49On the last dive day
36:59before Hurricane Ernesto
37:01is expected to impact
37:02Cape Breton,
37:03Off the topside,
37:04I have a hit.
37:05Diver Mike Haas
37:06uncovers an artifact.
37:09Topside,
37:09I believe I have a coin.
37:12Good job, Haas.
37:12Okay, I want you
37:17to bring that up.
37:18Griego,
37:19are you good for air?
37:20Air is running low.
37:23Topside, Griego.
37:24Low air,
37:25servicing.
37:28Two units leaving bottom.
37:30Divers are returning
37:31to surface.
37:32Just pay attention
37:33when you guys
37:33are coming up
37:34because this wind's
37:35picking up a little.
37:36Copy that.
37:37With all the divers
37:45accounted for.
37:46What do we have,
37:47Mr. Haas?
37:48Mike Haas
37:49can show Jeff
37:50what he's found.
37:51Check this out.
37:56It's a one real.
37:58The smallest
37:59denomination they made.
38:00The Spanish made.
38:00The finder of the day.
38:01The one reals
38:02are very rare.
38:03Get out of here.
38:04Serious.
38:04The real is the unit
38:07of currency used
38:08by the Spanish Empire
38:09from the 14th century
38:11until its replacement
38:12by the peso.
38:14In 1868,
38:15the real was minted
38:16in half,
38:18one,
38:19two,
38:19four,
38:20and eight real
38:21denominations.
38:24You see the cross there?
38:26Yeah, I see it.
38:27There's a size of shield.
38:28It's a one real.
38:30Don't sneeze
38:31because you'll lose it.
38:31And there's
38:32sparingly few of them.
38:35Okay,
38:35that's great.
38:37This coin,
38:38it's a really good find.
38:40Let's get one more dive in.
38:42Because,
38:42believe me when I tell you,
38:44where there's one,
38:45there's many, many more.
38:47So we know where we're at.
38:49We know what we're looking for.
38:50Coin, definitely.
38:52I'll bet.
38:52Goodbye.
38:53Goodbye.
39:04Hey guys,
39:10we've reached the spot here.
39:11Let's turn the detectors on
39:13and see what we can find.
39:14Roger that.
39:15Top side,
39:30just circling around the area
39:33in this crevice.
39:36Excellent.
39:36There's something under here.
39:50Griego,
39:51what do you have over there?
39:53Digging a bit here.
39:54Hold on.
40:00Top side,
40:01you're going to love this.
40:03What's, uh,
40:04what's going on, pal?
40:05We just found another coin.
40:08Attaboy.
40:09Keep digging then,
40:10there must be more.
40:12Roger,
40:13solid copy.
40:14I told you we'd find more.
40:23Wind.
40:25Current's pushing in such a way,
40:27I'm worried about that ridge
40:28right there.
40:30Even the seagulls
40:31getting further away from it.
40:34With the wind picking up,
40:36so too is the current
40:37that runs along
40:38the southern coast
40:39of the island.
40:40This current will push us
40:42into the rocks.
40:43Making it difficult
40:44for the divers
40:45to surface safely.
40:46Where's the f***ing Goniac?
40:48Hey, Chris,
40:49get that f***ing boat moving.
40:54Diver up!
40:56Go get him
40:57before he hits those rocks.
40:58Careful you don't run
41:02through your divers.
41:05Pizio's up there
41:05behind you guys.
41:06You see him?
41:09That boy,
41:09he's going to be okay.
41:13Oh, my darling dear.
41:19Alright.
41:21Now,
41:21what do we have?
41:26Holy frig,
41:27another one.
41:28That's a nice coin.
41:31Yeah,
41:32it's a Spanish 8 real.
41:33That is an 8 real,
41:34yeah.
41:36It's a clip coin
41:37just like the other one.
41:38That's the largest coin
41:39they minted.
41:40And this is
41:41in a nice shape.
41:42It is a nice coin.
41:448 reals like this
41:45have been known
41:46to fetch up to $30,000
41:47on the open market.
41:49This is the same stuff
41:50that we're getting
41:51on the Feversham,
41:52but this ain't the Feversham.
41:53It's too far up the coast.
41:54So this could very easily
41:56be the Neptune.
41:58All I can say is
41:59this was a really good day, fellas.
42:02You don't even know how good,
42:03I don't think,
42:04but this was a good day.
42:06Is this part of the long-lost treasure
42:09hoard from the Neptune?
42:10And if so,
42:12what other treasures
42:13remain to be found?
42:15Jeff is about to face
42:16some tough decisions
42:17as hurricane season approaches
42:19and threatens to shut down
42:21any chance of finding
42:23more of the privateer's plunder
42:24hidden on the seafloor.
42:29Next,
42:30on the Death Coast.
42:33Stay close, you guys.
42:35Roger that.
42:36With a powerful hurricane
42:37barreling down on the Death Coast.
42:39It's a groundswell.
42:41This is going to be a shitload.
42:43The team pivots
42:44to a long-lost shipwreck.
42:47What is that?
42:48What are you seeing?
42:50With time running out
42:51on the mission.
42:52Topside, this is Griego.
42:54Can you hear me?
42:55I'm just not seeing
42:56what I should be.
42:57I'm running low on air.
42:59A major find.
43:01It's huge.
43:02May end a 300-year-old mystery.
43:05Ooh, boy.
43:06That's what we're looking for.
43:09I'm running low on air.
43:11You're not having to stop then.
43:12I'm running low on air.