Miriam Amirault’s New Discovery CONFIRMS the $150M Oak Island Treasure!
Oak Island Researcher Uncovers Physical Proof of Legendary $150 Million Treasure, Claims Team
An Atlantic storm has led to what Oak Island researcher Miriam Amoro says is the first hard physical evidence that a long-rumoured $150 million treasure cache is real – and still buried somewhere beneath the island.
According to the team, the discovery was made after a powerful storm system tore across Nova Scotia, damaging parts of Oak Island’s shoreline and exposing previously untouched ground close to an old stone pathway.
Storm damage reveals unnatural fracture

At first light following the storm, series regular Rick Lagina inspected the damage along the causeway and nearby paths. Among the debris, he noticed a strip of earth that appeared to have peeled back in a straight, clean fracture rather than eroded away.
The exposed soil, Amoro later observed, showed unusual mineral staining – deep reds with blue and black streaks not consistent with the island’s usual composition. Embedded in the fracture, she spotted a faint metallic glint.
“It wasn’t rusted, it wasn’t modern debris,” she is reported to have said on site. “The reflection was too clean, too controlled. It had clearly been protected from the elements for a very long time.”
Rather than removing the object immediately, Amoro ordered the area mapped, flagged and scanned using GPS and subsurface sensors.
The initial data revealed that the fracture ran in an almost perfectly straight line which, when plotted, matched the known axis of the original Money Pit – not approximately, but exactly. A secondary scan westward suggested a second alignment pointing towards an unexplored pocket of the island’s western swamp. Together, the lines formed a geometric triangle. At its centre, the instruments identified a density anomaly small enough to have been missed by earlier surveys.
“This isn’t just a crack in the ground,” Amoro told the team. “It’s part of a designed layout.”
Bronze fragment with Templar-style symbols
When detailed excavation began, the metallic object first seen in the fracture was gradually exposed. The team say it proved to be a deliberately shaped bronze fragment with a smooth curvature and clean edges, showing none of the corrosion typically found on colonial-era metalwork on the island.
Along its rim, precise markings were visible: intersecting geometric shapes, spirals and runic-style sigils. One symbol – an eight-pointed star – closely resembled navigation glyphs historically associated with medieval Templar routes in Portugal and across the Atlantic.
The cut on the fragment suggested it was not broken from a larger piece, but manufactured as a component – perhaps part of a mechanism.
Amoro then positioned the curved bronze over a shallow depression on a nearby stone slab. The fragment reportedly fitted perfectly, like a key in a lock. As it was pressed into place, the slab shifted, sliding aside to reveal a sealed chamber beneath. A rush of cold, stale air escaped, consistent with an enclosed space untouched for centuries.
Timber lining, ritual seal and engineered shaft
Inside, the upper layer of the chamber was lined with carefully placed timber beams coated in a glossy resin identified by Amoro as Mediterranean pine – a material linked historically to medieval shipbuilding rather than local North American construction.
Driven through one of the beams was an iron pin containing traces of silver. Engineers on site noted that such an alloy would be weaker structurally, suggesting the pin was symbolic rather than purely functional. Controlled scorch marks below the timber appeared consistent with deliberate sealing by fire – a technique some historians associate with ritual closure of sacred or protected spaces.
Below the timber layer, a micro camera revealed a vertical shaft lined with finely fitted, dry-stacked stone. Grooves running down the walls looked like guide rails. An iron ring fixed to the stone at mid-depth indicated a controlled hoisting system designed to lower heavy cargo rather than simply access people.
“This wasn’t a hurried hiding place,” Amoro observed. “It was a purpose-built transport shaft.”
Gold bars and a message to a “western vault”
At the bottom of the shaft, the camera revealed stacked rectangular objects wrapped in decayed cloth. As the image sharpened, the team realised they were looking at bars – not stone, but metal. Where the wrapping had failed, a deep yellow sheen was visible.
According to those present, the metal was identified as solid gold. Faded red crosses on the cloth matched Templar-style iconography, while Roman numerals and letter markings on one bar aligned with medieval European inventory systems used to catalogue bullion.
Alongside the bars lay a preserved wooden plank branded with a Portuguese inscription. Amoro translated it as: “This is the passage to the western vault.”
The wording suggested that the chamber under inspection was not the primary storage site, but one node in a wider network of vaults.
Copper schematic points to active hydraulic system
Further inside a horizontal tunnel branching from the chamber, the camera encountered a shaped copper sheet bearing an etched overhead outline of Oak Island. It showed known search areas such as the Money Pit and the swamp, but also three additional marked locations that have never been excavated.
Lines between the symbols resembled an engineering schematic, mapping fluid channels and pressure lines rather than simple paths. Amoro interpreted the design as a sophisticated hydraulic defence system – a multi-chamber flood mechanism intended to protect several vaults simultaneously.
Live sensor readings from one of the previously unknown symbol locations then picked up a rhythmic vibration deep underground, similar to residual flow in old European water lock systems. Analysis suggested an intact hollow space of sufficient volume to house a major treasure cache.
Taken together – the bronze “key” fragment, Mediterranean timbers, ritual-style fastenings, stacked gold bars, the Portuguese inscription and the copper schematic – Amoro concluded that the long-rumoured $150 million Templar treasure was not lost or dispersed, but still stored within a functioning engineered network beneath Oak Island.
“For the first time,” she said, “we are not dealing with legend or guesswork. We are dealing with a mapped, measurable system – and a vault whose location we can now define.”




