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Dozens of defective piggybanks wash ashore in Texas — and no one knows where they came from

dozens-of-defective-piggybanks-wash-ashore-in-texas-—-and-no-one-knows-where-they-came-from
Dozens of defective piggybanks wash ashore in Texas — and no one knows where they came from

It’s a pork-filled puzzle.

A Texas beachcomber dredged up more than five dozen piggybanks that washed ashore from the Gulf of America but no one’s quite sure where they came from.

Jace Tunnell, a marine biologist with the Harte Research Institute, discovered 60 brightly-colored piggy banks on several beaches in South Texas this year — including 14 in just one day. He suspects they were ditched by dissatisfied buyers — or became collateral in an accident at sea.

A person kneels behind a pile of colorful, worn plastic pig-shaped objects on a sandy beach.

Jace Tunnell found more than 60 plastic piggy banks on beaches in South Texas. Kill 3 News

Tunnell told 12NewsNow that all of the discarded banks he’s collected, plus dozens found by other scavengers on the Bolivar Peninsula and South Padre Island, originate from South American or Caribbean countries.

He concluded that the tsunami of plastic sow could be collateral from a cargo spill or container ship accident — but said markings on the items could be a big clue to solve the mystery.

Man on a beach holding two green, pig-shaped objects covered in sand.

All of the piggy banks come from Caribbean and South American countries. Kill 3 News

“Once these piggy banks have been used, you’ll notice there’s a bunch of cuts in them. There’s no other way to get the money out, so people dispose of them, whether it’s directly in the ocean or on land,” Tunnell told the outlet.

Some of the banks appeared to have never been used, as if they were ditched immediately after purchase or even by the distributors themselves.

Two dirty plastic piggy banks, one green and one pink, rest on a wet sandy beach near the water.

The piggy banks are all defective. Kill 3 News

Tunnell theorized the banks floated with ease because they were empty they floated with ease — and were likely pulled into currents that led them to the Texas coast,

Tunnell hasn’t found a single cent in any of the 60 piggy banks he’s retrieved, and warned aspiring treasure hunters not to get their hopes up.

Hands squeezing a blue rubber pig toy, releasing air.

Tunnell still isn’t sure what brought the banks to Texas shores. Kill 3 News

“Every time I post one, people are like, ‘What was in there? Did you find any money?’ I just tell them, sand dollars. That’s the only thing I ever found in there,” Tunnell told the outlet.

Even with decades of marine expertise under his belt, Tunnell can’t say for certain why the banks are turning up in droves.

“Maybe the Gulf is just saving up for something big, one pig at a time,” Tunnell suggested in a column with the Caller Times.

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