Keith Ranville "World's Greatest Treasure Hunter - Explorer" Vancouver B.C/Halifax N.S AKA for producing the latest Oak/Birch Island treasure research news media/theories/discoveries/Canadian First Nations Heritage research Studies.

Thursday, April 17, 2008

OAK ISLAND THEORIES BREAKS CODES



FIRST NATIONS OAK ISLAND THEORIES
Cree Code Breaker Keith Ranville and the Oak Island Mystery Alternate Perceptions
The so-called "Money Pit" on Oak Island in Nova Scotia has reportedly drained $10M from the pockets of treasure seekers and claimed the lives of six people in the 200-plus years since the pit was first discovered. Now Keith Ranville, a Cree Indian, has turned his knowledge of Cree pictographs to deciphering the enigmatic stone carvings found on the island. Will the Oak Island mystery finally be solved? Are the Oak Island engravings related to Images in Stone found throughout New England?



LOST TREASURE MAGAZINE Cree Code Breaker Challenges 140-Year Old Cipher–The enigma of Oak Island has been called one of the greatest archaeological and engineering achievements of mankind. Often referred to as Canada’s best-known unsolved mystery, Oak Island proudly boasts it’s title for hosting the site of the World’s longest treasure hunt in recorded history.


Cree Native translates ancient stone as a Da Vinci treasure map By Angie Zinck- Lunenburg Progress Enterprise - October 18, 2006 WESTERN SHORE- Nova Scotia You may have heard about the Da Vinci code, but the Ranville code could be what solves the longest-running treasure hunt in recorded history. Keith Ranville, a First Nations man, has travelled from Winnipeg to Nova Scotia


NEW READING OF MYSTERIOUS OAK ISLAND INSCRIPTION Theory points to possible connection with nearby Birch Island HALIFAX, Nova Scotia: Wednesday, 11th, 2007
For the past two centuries, the tunnels of Nova Scotia’s Oak Island have piqued the imagination of historians and treasure hunters alike. Now, a new theory by First Nations researcher Keith Ranville may add fresh speculation to the mystery.


KEITH RANVILLE BREAKS OAK ISLAND CODES
the new treasure island is protected by Mr. Christopher Ondaatje in which was made by famous by First Nations Keith Ranville.

CKBW, 98.1 FM Radio in Nova Scotia Keith Ranville's radio Interview October 15th 2006 on CKBW, 98.1 FM in Nova Scotia. He appeared on South Shore Sunday Morning with host, Sheldon Macleod. To listen to the interview about Oak Island's buried treasure, click the link .

Oak Island First Nations Radio Interviews The World today With Gord MacDonald CKNW AM 980 Vancouver, Interview about The Oak Island Treasure Mystery

Errie Radio Keith Ranville casually chats with his new friends radio jockeys DK & Fizz about Oak Island and it’s Mystery including conversations about theories on the Money pit and it’s connection to the famous Birch Island Triangle. Mp3

XZONE RADIO SHOW- I would like to invite Keith Ranville, to be my guest on, Monday, May 21 2007, 10 pm – 11 pm Eastern to talk about “Oak Island Story.”

Mid Summer 2005 First Nations Keith Ranville set out from his Vancouver home to investigate a at the time a Oak Island's diminishing place of interest.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Canadian First Nations native out smarts the money pit, logical knowledge used to un-code a unbreakable cipher. Decoder Keith Ranville has become a over night sensation in the treasure world, this story has all the makings of a Hollywood movie script. Producers, Journalist please contact Keith Directly for more information.


Eternally Crazy!!! by Corey L. Desjarlais a old friend of mine writes a story of a lifestyle in the gang world, the story is a reflextion from his life; aka Corey is known as author of "Growing up with Keith Ranville". Amazon.ca
Now Public Keith Ranville Profile http://my.nowpublic.com/keith-ranville



Trepanier Lodge No. 83 A.F. & A.M.G.R.B.C. & Y. Mysteries and Myths


FIRST NATIONS TREASURE HUNTER
Keith Ranville
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    Monday, April 14, 2008

    MAYAN ROSSLYN OAK ISLAND CONNECTION



    Treasure News: Could the Da Vinci code continue too the Mayan civilization, the Rosslyn chapel gives plausible clues of a Mayan Temple connection. One of the clues that mystifies me is the depiction of corn and aloe beneath the Corn a Maya ruin in the Rosslyn chapel

    Rosslyn Indian New world Corn wasn't known to Europeans yet,
    this is as mysterious as finding coconut husk in the Money pit
    These are prominent plants in the new world all but one Rosslyn plant images was imported by the European explorers to the new world. With these Rosslyn plant clues I searched for more possible clues in the meso civilizations, Mayan architectural art and block writing gave some indication that there maybe a relation in art and block writing.



    The Mayan art of beings are mostly Mayans in a crouching positions, in similarities the Rosslyn chapels being images are in somewhat in a crouching perched position.



    The Rosslyn chapels ceiling block writing does show the same concept depiction of putting there illustrations in square area's as to the Mayan block writing. May this be a coincidence or maybe this is what culture the author of the Rosslyn church was incorporating into the the chapel's portraits as a story of it's souls it reached out to, with similar knowledge. The Rosslyn chapel does have different images that periodical show up all over the Rosslyn church, this gives reason the church is in story illustration rather in code, this would be not logical for the author of the Rosslyn Chapel to give vital clues or the secrets to the St. Clair secret royal society, then to be depicted in a open venue' this logic would be like wise, for the Mayan and many other ancient culture's.

    But' it is well known that the Sinclair's traveled to the America's and they were associated with the Rosslyn church. These Rosslyn clues may give clues on just how far the Sinclair's voyaged along the America's eastern seaboard and who they may of interacted with, the Rosslyn chapel perhaps is a partial travel monument, and the code to Rosslyn's chapel is possibly in the Sinclair's new world foes of the Spanish conquers.



    Some has associated, the Oak Island treasure mystery to lost treasure's of the south American empire's. If so, who could of assisted the south American culture's wealth to a far Island off of Nova Scotia. The Sinclair's were seafaring traveler's and had knowledge of the Nova Scotia region. Would it be to much for Sinclair expeditions to venture further down the eastern coast of the new America's after all the the Sinclair's had the best seaworthy navigators of there time. The south American Native wealth and knowledge has eluded the minds of scholars for centuries, could of the south American empires have had a European allied unknown to the Spanish conquers and to the world. The Sinclair expeditions may have kindred to the south American culture' and would be probable candidates to oversee the potential demise of the south American civilizations, brought forward by the Spanish conquers. The Sinclair's would not be sympathizers of the south American culture, but a solidarity rescue coalition for keeper's of given great knowledge.


    This looks like a ancient native tool perhaps from a past mysterious civilization in the America's
    The Oak Island heart shaped stone is a ancient tool otherwise a mallet head perhaps a pick-axe used to construct the money pit. The Handle was grooved to attach to the wedged stone? Then wrapped with material available twine/leather.
    The builders of the money pit had simple ancient tools this is a clue of the culture responsible for the Oak Island mystery.
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    CANADIAN
    First Nations/Sinclair Heritage
    Treasure Hunter/Researcher
    Keith Ranville







    Treasure news Update: Famous Knights Templar author Steven Sora Confirms that he will be a speaker at Oak Island Days (summer) 2009.

    For further information on visiting Nova Scotia contact: Nova Scotia.com Oak Island Tourism Society and mention; Oak Island treasure hunter Keith Ranville inspired you to visit Nova Scotia .

    Tuesday, April 01, 2008

    ALTERNATE PERCEPTIONS MAGAZINE

    Cree Code Breaker Keith Ranville and the Oak Island Mystery


    By Brent Raynes
    Keith Ranville of Vancouver, British Columbia, is a Cree Indian who was born in Winnipeg. Keith has brought a new perspective to the legendary Oak Island mystery of Nova Scotia’s Mahone Bay area, and it’s probably about time. I first read about this mystery myself in Stranger Than Science by Frank Edwards back in the late 1960s. 213 years have passed so far and no one has yet to recover the pirate treasure that so many feel is buried beneath the earth there. Over the years, many people have attempted to translate mysterious symbols reportedly copied from two different stones on the island, hoping to isolate some vital clue or insight into how to retrieve the treasure that is believed to be buried there.


    In a statement posted on the Internet two months ago, Keith Ranville was quoted: “I believe these symbols have been incorrectly assumed to stand for something else. In the First Nations tradition that I’m a part of, we believe symbols should simply be looked at in and of themselves, rather than thinking of them as codes that have to be cracked. In the pictograms of Cree Salavics, for example, the images are meant to be descriptive, not abstract.”


    Keith noticed the use of triangles from the stone symbols to be a recurrent and possibly a significant theme. “The triangles seemed like they were more emphasized,” he said. “The first line of the symbols were mostly triangles. I got the idea that this thing was mostly about triangles and so I began to look for triangle clues on the island itself. There was one triangular clue, a stone triangle, that was found south of this so-called ‘Money Pit.’”

    “I looked on google at aerial photos of the island and I went east of that stone triangle that was there, because on the symbols itself there was an arrow that pointed at the right angle of a triangle, the fourth and fifth symbol, so I went in that direction and I looked everywhere there east on the island. I didn’t see it, so I checked on a neighboring island, and sure enough a big triangle popped out at me from Birch Island.” It was a section of the island that had a triangular appearance.


    Speaking of triangles, Keith made another discovery. “I found something while doing Internet research that actually talks about the significance of triangles in Micmac language,” he noted. “It actually means something like God and in Egyptian it means ‘exalted one.’ That’s off of petroglyphs of the Micmacs and their writings, and so that really fascinated me too because the Micmac are native to the Mahone Bay area. If anyone is going to know about this Oak Island mystery it’s going to be the Micmacs because it’s in their back yard.”

    Since three young men discovered this vertical shaft entrance back in 1795, which they believed led to a pirate treasure, countless man hours have been spent, and, over the years, it has exceeded ten million dollars in cost to try and get to the proverbial bottom of what has become known as the “Money Pit,” not to mention the tragic loss of human life. So far the lives of six men have been lost. In 1803, the Onslow Company, which had become the first in a long line of treasure recovery operations, discovered at the 90 foot level a flat stone with a strange inscription on it. Reportedly weighing about 175 pounds, measuring two feet long and 15 inches wide, a translation attempt was made by one James Leitchi, a professor of languages at Dalhousie University, who thought it perhaps read, “forty feet below two million pounds are buried.”

    “The thing with Oak Island is that it has always been a controversy,” Keith explained to me. “There was so much lost evidence and there were like no significant well documented archaeological finds and it seemed like one thing was bungled up after another.” Yes, unfortunately the inscription stone eventually became lost. We’re told that it became used as a hearthstone in two homes on Oak Island, and then it was placed in a Halifax store front where it went missing around 1900 after the building was torn down. However, the two line and forty-character text was reportedly copied and thus preserved by a Mahone Bay schoolteacher who had hoped that he could translate it. Meanwhile, back in the 1930’s, the fragment of another stone, with similar symbols on it, turned up at Oak Island’s Smith Cove, though it also had a symbol that was different. “It could be Greek,” Keith explained. “I’m not too sure if it is. But four dots and a plus in the middle in Greek means ‘underwater doors.’ I think that around the 100 foot level, the area where the treasure stone was found, they should not have gone any farther.” Reportedly the mine shaft goes down nearly 200 feet now.

    “There’s supposed to be another dig going on this summer,” Keith added. “They figure that there’s like a Spanish treasure down there.” So far, fragments of a gold chain have been found, and a camera lowered down into the pit in 1971 reportedly recorded images of wooden chests and human remains.

    “It seems more like a spiritual quest than a treasure hunting quest,” Keith confided. “For me to come up with all of these possible and plausible solutions to Oak Island intrigues a lot of people as to how this native guy, out of nowhere, comes to Oak Island, to Nova Scotia, and people are willing to write articles and letters of support. I’ve been on the radio numerous times.”

    In the summer of 2005, Keith traveled to Nova Scotia and spent a year looking into the Oak Island mystery. “I think what most people are intrigued by is how I got there because anyone can jump on a plane and go to Nova Scotia and then come back,” Keith told me. “I got there pretty much on my wits. I hitchhiked most of the way and took a bus a little bit of the way. I rested out in Winnipeg first, for a week or so, and then I continued on my journey. I guess Winnipeg was like the halfway mark. I went from city to city. I talked to many people. I talked to the Freemasons and they’re pretty intrigued with what I was saying about Oak Island. For some reason, I felt a need to talk to them. I have no desire to become a Freemason myself.”

    “When I was in high school I was going to do a paper on the Oak Island mystery,” Keith recalled. “I didn’t get to hand it in because there was a death in the family. But I remembered the original concept I perceived on translating these symbols back then but I didn’t follow up on it until years later, until I was in my mid-thirties.” “I believe it was a universal written language. I feel that it was something made to be understood no matter what culture you are from or what language you speak. It wasn’t something made for just one creed of person or a certain group of people to understand. It was meant for anyone.” “I believe that there may be a Mayan connection to this, for some reason,” Keith added. “Just by the way that the stones of this triangle were lined up. It just gave me that feeling that this was Mayan, and especially with the symbols themselves.”

    Keith also gets insights sometimes in his dreams: A Egytian Kings Dream

    Thutmose IV dreamt an event, while he was in prince-hood, while he had gone hunting and fell asleep in the shade of the sphinx. while dreaming, the sphinx spoke to Thutmose and told him to clear away the sand. The sphinx told him that if he did this, he would be King of Egypt. Thutmose carried out this dream request and the sphinx granted Thermoses' given dream promise to reality, Thutmose was later anointed the kingship of Egypt.

    Keith welcomes feedback from our readers.

    Keith's email address is: keith_ranville@hotmail.com

    Check out his website: http://oakislandtreasurenewsarchives.blogspot.com/




    Courtesy of Alternate Perceptions Magazine


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    Treasure news Update: Famous Knights Templar author Steven Sora Confirms that he will be a speaker at Oak Island Days (summer) 2009.


    SKY-LITE-STENCILS- Buster “Cat Thunder” Wilson First Nations Native Stencil Art


    For further information on visiting Nova Scotia contact: Nova Scotia.com Oak Island Tourism Society and mention; Oak Island treasure hunter Keith Ranville inspired you to visit Nova Scotia .

    Canadian Cree First Nations Leading Oak Island Treasure Hunter/Researcher

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    Keith Ranville: Read my historical research credits for descriptively translating the Money pit symbols and for ciphering the Oak Island stone triangle that lead to discovering Oak Island's latest discovery the Birch Island treasure triangle for more information on Oak Islands exclusive new research theories/discoveries and treasure news concerning new methods on solving the Oak Island treasure mystery please view this site it's about a Canadian Heritage project. Cree First Nations Shamanistic Oak Island Treasure Hunter/Researcher (keith_ranville@hotmail.com)