Monolith or just trash? Metal sculpture in Utah appears to have been
demolished
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[December 02, 2020]
(Reuters) - The mysterious metal
column found standing inexplicably in a remote part of Utah's desert
last month was knocked down and dismantled by a group of men who
considered it "trash," according to a photographer who documented the
object's demise.
As images of the object gleaming amid dusty red rocks spread online,
many noted a vague resemblance to the so-called "monoliths" in Stanley
Kubrick's 1968 film "2001: A Space Odyssey," prompting strained jokes
about a possibly extraterrestrial origin.
But photographer Ross Bernards posted images to Instagram on Monday of
what he said were the object's final moments that show there is nothing
especially alien about the technology behind the sculpture: it appeared
to be sheets of metal riveted to a hollow wooden scaffold.
In a caption accompanying a series of pictures of the object, Bernards
described driving six hours on Friday with three friends to take some
evocative pictures of the object by moonlight.
After getting some shots, he said he heard some voices coming up the
canyon, and four men appeared. Bernards wrote that he stepped away so
the new group could also enjoy some time alone with the object, only to
watch as they began shoving it.
[to top of second column]
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"They gave a couple of pushes on the monolith and one of them said,
'You better have got your pictures,'" Bernards wrote. "He then gave
it a big push, and it went over, leaning to one side. He yelled back
to his other friends that they didn't need the tools. The other guy
with him at the monolith then said 'this is why you don't leave
trash in the desert.'"
The object soon fell with a loud bang, and the men made quick work
of breaking it apart and carting it off in wheelbarrows, Bernards
wrote.
"Leave no trace," one of the men told Bernards and his friends.
The U.S. Bureau of Land Management, which oversees the desert where
the object was found, said last week it was not investigating
because it considered the object private property, and so a matter
for the local sheriff.
The San Juan County Sheriff's office did not respond to questions on
Tuesday, but said in a statement earlier this week it "did not have
the proper resources to devote much time" to the object's arrival or
disappearance.
(Reporting by Rich McKay in Atlanta and Jonathan Allen in New York,
Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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