A strange monolith found jutting out of the rocks in a remote mountain range near Las Vegas has been taken down by authorities.
Its discovery over the weekend, and quick removal, revived a pandemic-era mystery that captured the public’s imagination when similar objects began to appear around the world.
How it got there is still a mystery.
“It remains unknown how the item got to its location or who might be responsible,” Las Vegas police said Friday in a series of posts on X announcing the removal of the glimmering, 6-foot-4 rectangular prism.
Its removal was quick, because it was illegally installed and because of concerns over public safety and the land, which was established to protect bighorn sheep and is home to rare plants and desert tortoises.
Members of the police department's search and rescue team had discovered the object over the weekend near Gass Peak, part of the vast Desert National Wildlife Refuge where bighorn sheep and desert tortoises can be found roaming.
It was the latest discovery in a series of mysterious shiny columns popping up around the globe since at least 2020.
In November of that year, a similar metal monolith was found deep in the Mars-like landscape of Utah’s red-rock desert. Then came sightings in Romania, central California and on the famed Fremont Street in downtown Las Vegas.
All of them disappeared as quickly as they popped up.
The Utah structure, believed to be the first in the series, had been embedded in the rock in an area so remote that officials didn’t immediately reveal its location for fear of people getting lost or stranded while trying to find it.
Las Vegas police said the same concerns led them to tear down the latest monolith on Thursday afternoon. The department said it is being stored “at an undisclosed location” while authorities try to figure out the best way to dispose or store the massive object made out of a reflective sheet of metal that was molded around the prism and secured with rebar and concrete.
The otherworldly structure evokes the object that appears in the Stanley Kubrick movie “2001: A Space Odyssey."
It was illegally installed on federal land managed by the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.