The 200-pound rubber bales come from a blockade runner that sank off the coast of Brazil...
on South Padre Island. Officials said the bales began washing up on beaches in South Texas and Florida in 2020. Each bale weighs close to 200 pounds.
In January 1944, the SS Rio Grande was spotted by American ships off the coast of Brazil. The crew of the Rio Grande abandoned the ship and its cargo and purposefully tried to sink it once they realized they had been spotted. The American ships — the USS Omaha and USS Jouett — fired on the Rio Grande until it sank, sending its cargo to the ocean bottom.
“Given that these rubber bales weigh close to 200 pounds, how are they getting from off the coast of Brazil to Texas?” officials said in a recent Facebook post.Check out how inflation has changed prices over the last decade with this interactive quiz As the SS Rio Grande started to break up, the waterlogged rubber bales floated up from the ocean bottom and into the North Brazilian current, officials said. From there, the bales stayed afloat in a series of northbound currents along the coast of South and Central America, around the Yucatan, and then finally into the Gulf of Mexico.
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