Tacoma Remodel Stalled As Crew Unearths WWII Tank Rounds Underfoot

Renovating a Tacoma home is supposed to uncover outdated wiring and questionable wallpaper, not World War II era tank rounds. Yet that is exactly what workers found on Wednesday, bringing construction to a screeching halt and drawing in bomb technicians.

After the crew spotted two suspicious, heavy metal objects on the property, Tacoma police and military ordnance teams responded and treated them as potential unexploded munitions while specialists worked out exactly what they were.

Explosive ordnance disposal technicians with the Tacoma Police Department first identified one object as military ordnance, then found a second similar item nearby. Army explosive ordnance disposal personnel later took custody of both pieces, according to KING 5. Officers cleared the immediate area while the specialists examined and removed the rounds.

What the rounds were

According to Tacoma police, the items turned out to be M77 90 millimeter armor piercing rounds that date back to World War II. U.S. Army technical guidance for 90 millimeter ammunition describes the M77 as a solid steel, armor piercing projectile used in 90 millimeter tank and anti tank guns. That lines up with what technicians observed on scene: the projectiles were solid steel and not hollow explosive shells (U.S. Army technical manual TM 9-374).

How authorities handled it

Tacoma police reported that each round weighed about 23.4 pounds and that initial checks suggested they did not contain explosive filler. Army EOD personnel removed the projectiles for secure transport, according to KING 5. Officials reminded neighbors that even ordnance that appears inert can still be dangerous and urged people to clear the area and call authorities instead of trying to move anything themselves…

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