Oak Island's National Treasure Triangle

I was going to post this http://www.birchislandillusion.blogspot.com/ but thought about it and figured someone here should've found it already.

Locknar did, but the link didn't work, so I'm reposting.

The author of the blog has made a mini career of debunking and uncloaking Ranville, evidently.

I take it Ranville/Oakster has left the building.... So this thread can sink gracefully over the horizon to the dreaded anonymity of Page 2, I guess.
 
Foolmewunz - I can't edit my post now, but see there is a syntax error in the link I put in. Thanks for the "repost".

I poked around last night, and found where Ranville will go to a site, post his "Immediate Release" note...and then pretty much just go "poof" into the night, never to be heard from again.
 
I grew up in Nova Scotia and spent the summers on the South Shore with my grandparents who had a cottage near there. I find things like these from people dismissed by the locals as "out-of-towners" to be personally embarrassing. It's never been "debunked" as far as I was aware until I read the link above with great interest. But nobody who lives there seems to care much about it. To busy watching "Oprah" I guess.
 
Oak Island Stone Triangle New Information And What Its Means

OAK ISLAND STONE TRIANGLE NEW INFORMATION AND WHAT ITS MEANS

INTERPRETATION
The Oak Island stone triangle found south of the money pit was miss-interpreted, it was believed to be pointing north. This stone triangle and its northern point is center of a pyramid diagram and aligns in a different direction other than the dividing south/north stone line through the stone triangle.


Hi Randi fans I have know links but I welcome you skepticism I think research needs a more in depth look at before anyone throughs in a towel at any controversy what so ever I have no links at the time in time to will explain myself but

cheers '

but go to canadaka.com oak island
 
I have been to Oak Island. It is an absolutely beautiful area, near another beautiful area called "the ovens", along the coast of Nova Scotia. We took the tour, looked through the little museum (not as nice as the maritime museum, though), did the whole tourist thing. The place is beautiful enough that it should not need treasure to lure tourist money...but I guess it does. A bit like Roswell that way. I'd say it's sad, but really it is a beautiful area, so the surprise is on whoever goes there looking for the other type of treasure.
 
Hi Randi fans I have know links but I welcome you skepticism I think research needs a more in depth look at before anyone throughs in a towel at any controversy what so ever I have no links at the time in time to will explain myself but

cheers '

Can someone translate the above into English for me? I can get as far as "Hi Randi fans" but the rest is a mystery. Thanks.
 
Hey Oakster,

Did you know Sash K. Iman pointed out that problem with your translation on July 12, 2007?
 
Well, it's civil, but this is spamming.

Oakster is just promoting a venture as he's done on other sites. It's like junkmail - if he just picks up one sucker out of two hundred lurkers/readers, he's happy.

Reported.
 
Just thought I'd chime in with something that should be blazingly obvious. Apparently after digging down so far, the hole flooded with sea water. Okay, so let's take it as a given that the "original" hole supposedly sunk to bury the treasure extends below sea level.

Even the best mining and excavating technology of the period when the hole was supposed to have been dug would have only been capable of reducing the level of the incoming water at best a few inches, maybe a foot. We're talking bucket chains or maybe a hand-driven water pump. And the pump is unlikely, because it would have had to be at or near the bottom of the hole because you can only suck water up so far before the difference in pressure causes it to turn to water vapor. You have to push water out of a deep hole, not pull it.

There is no practical way (based on my understanding of the technology of the period) for the shaft to have been driven below sea level by diggers.

I suppose that if there is some kind of natural subsidence phenomenon like sinkholes, it might be possible for an item buried at a higher level to be carried down to a lower level over time. Common sense tells me, though, that once you've hit seawater, the odds of finding anything deliberately buried are nil.

Beanbag
 
Last edited:
...The Oak Island stone triangle found south of the money pit was miss-interpreted, it was believed to be pointing north. This stone triangle and its northern point is center of a pyramid diagram and aligns in a different direction other than the dividing south/north stone line through the stone triangle.


Neat-o! Now pyramids are involved.

Can quantum physics be far behind?
 
Don't tell anyone, but I'm working on quantum pyramids. I have no idea what the effect will be, but it's bound to be AWESOME.
I suspect they have to be homeopathic quantum pyramids to get the Good Housekeeping Gold Seal of Approval.
 
I suspect they have to be homeopathic quantum pyramids to get the Good Housekeeping Gold Seal of Approval.



Oooh, you just gave me a great idea for what to do with the little bottle of sand my mom brought back from Egypt a few years ago ...
 

Back
Top Bottom