Marty Lagina Marks Western Cradle Discovery as Oak Island Filming Begins at Lot 8
HARD ROCK BREAKS EXPECTATIONS DURING TEST EXCAVATION
A routine excavation on Nova Scotia’s Oak Island takes a decisive turn when Marty Lagina’s team encounters an abrupt geological contradiction that immediately alters their working assumptions. While a control trench reaches hard bedrock at approximately 6 feet, a nearby excavation inside a newly exposed stone cradle continues through soft, workable material well beyond the same depth threshold.
The sharp divergence between adjacent test points raises immediate questions among the research team, as natural formations in the region typically present consistent subsurface conditions. The anomaly suggests a deliberate disruption in the underlying geology rather than uniform glacial or sedimentary formation.
STONE CRADLE STRUCTURE UNDER INTENSIVE HAND EXCAVATION
Attention soon shifts to a carefully constructed stone feature embedded within Lot 8, where archaeologists conduct controlled hand excavation to preserve structural integrity. Within the confines of the cradle, digging passes below the 6-foot mark without encountering the same bedrock layer identified just meters away.
Core sampling and geological testing reinforce the discrepancy. Soil extracted from beneath the cradle remains unusually soft and inconsistent with surrounding slate formations. Independent assessments describe the material as incompatible with undisturbed bedrock conditions, strengthening the case for prior human alteration of the site.
GEOLOGISTS CONFIRM UNUSUAL SUBSURFACE CONDITIONS
Specialist analysis from geoscientists and archaeological consultants further complicates the picture. Comparative drilling between the cradle interior and adjacent control points confirms a distinct subsurface boundary. One location presents solid slate bedrock; the other continues through unconsolidated material.
Researchers note that such a sharp geological divide over a short distance is highly irregular in natural settings. While no definitive conclusion is drawn, the data prompts renewed focus on the possibility of engineered modification beneath the structure.
MARTY LAGINA PLACES MARKER COIN AS DIRECTION IS SET
In the closing moments of the Season 13 finale, Marty Lagina returns alone to the western edge of Oak Island and places a single 1-ounce gold coin on the exposed stone surface of the cradle. The gesture is treated as a symbolic marker indicating the intended focus for future investigation.
Production schedules later indicate that filming for Season 14 began on June 1, 2026, with cameras positioned at the same western Lot 8 location. The development signals a clear strategic shift away from earlier emphasis on the traditional Money Pit zone.
SET TO EXPAND INVESTIGATION WESTWARD
With the production timeline confirmed and filming underway, the Oak Island team prepares for an expanded drilling program centered on the Lot 8 anomaly. The site, located significantly west of previous primary excavation zones, now represents a central focus of the upcoming season’s exploration strategy.
While no confirmed discoveries have been announced, the geological inconsistency, structural presence, and production direction all converge on a single point of interest: the stone cradle and what may lie beneath it.
As Season 14 approaches its scheduled premiere, attention now shifts to whether this western expansion will redefine the long-running investigation—or simply deepen the mystery further.



