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Eighty five ships — the last vessels held up by the huge container vessel that got stuck in the Suez Canal — will finally make their way through the waterway Saturday, canal officials said.

The once-stranded ships are expected to pass through both sides of the canal, Reuters reported. They include the last 61 ships out of 422 that queued up to move through the canal when the Ever Given container vessel was finally dislodged Monday.

Canal officlals are finishing up an investigation of what caused the Ever Given to run aground and will issue a report as early as next week.

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This satellite image shows on the left, routine maritime traffic in the Suez Canal with vessels on March 21, 2021 and on the right, maritime traffic backed up on the canal on March 25.
This satellite image shows on the left, routine maritime traffic in the Suez Canal with vessels on March 21, 2021 and on the right, maritime traffic backed up on the canal on March 25. ESA via AP
People walk along a pathway as the TSINGTAO EXPRESS crosses the Suez Canal on March 30, 2021.
People walk along a pathway as the TSINGTAO EXPRESS crosses the Suez Canal on March 30, 2021.Mahmoud Khaled/Getty Images
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International supply chains were disrupted when the Ever Given ran aground in the canal, a key trade artery, on March 23. Rescue teams took almost a week to free the ship after extensive dredging and tugging operations.

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