The mysterious metal monolith discovered recently in the Utah desert by public safety workers has disappeared, officials said on Saturday.
In its statement, the federal Bureau of Land Management’s Utah office said the three-sided metal structure was removed on Friday evening “by an unknown party” from the public land it was found on.
On 23 November the Utah Department of Public Safety claimed it had stumbled upon the seemingly man-made object during a helicopter survey for bighorn sheep.
Aliens? Artists? A mysterious metal monolith was just found in the Utah desert 👽 pic.twitter.com/JaUp3MimTc
— NowThis (@nowthisnews) November 24, 2020
According to Lt. Nick Street, a spokesman for the Department of Public Safety, the fact that the monolith had been embedded into the rock had triggered speculations as to how it had been installed in the first place.
“Somebody took the time to use some type of concrete-cutting tool or something to really dig down, almost in the exact shape of the object, and embed it really well… It’s odd. There are roads close by, but to haul the materials to cut into the rock, and haul the metal, which is taller than 12 feet in sections — to do all that in that remote spot is definitely interesting,” Street was quoted by The New York Times as saying.
According to officials, the structure was most likely a work of art and its installation on public land was illegal.
The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) said it would not investigate the disappearance of the mystery slab as “crimes involving private property” are managed by the local sheriff’s office.
From Art to Aliens
After images of the object started circulating on the internet, many in the art world speculated whether it could be the work of John McCracken, a minimalist sculptor with an affinity for science fiction, who died in 2011.
Quiet the mind and the soul will speak installation but minimalist John McCracken. The artist occupies a singular position in the recent history of American art with work that melds the restrained formal qualities of Minimalist sculpture. #art #inspiration #minimal pic.twitter.com/6jz9fa8jyQ
— ALIGNE (@AligneStudio) July 3, 2020
The David Zwirner gallery, which has exhibited the artist’s work, asserted that the mystery monolith was a bona fide McCracken, with the artist’s son, Patrick McCracken, telling The New York Times that his father had told him in 2002 that “he would like to leave his artwork in remote places to be discovered later.”
However, a mundane explanation didn’t sit well with a great many fans of the more outlandish theories.
Some people thought the column might be a tribute to the monolith in “2001: A Space Odyssey.”
Monolith Discovered in Utah Desert Has Everyone Buzzing Over ‘2001: A Space Odyssey’ https://t.co/t3Hfr3z89v pic.twitter.com/QsPnpCHrEh
— IndieWire (@IndieWire) November 24, 2020
Of course, something as tantalizing as the silvery slice of metal spotted amidst the red-rock canyons of the Utah desert couldn’t but spawn a plethora of wild theories linking the object to UFOs and aliens.
Despite officials doing their utmost to conceal the monolith’s location, claiming it would be dangerous for people to attempt to reach the outlying site, some nevertheless tracked it down.
David Surber trekked to the structure this week and posted videos of it on Instagram, saying it was located near Lockhart Basin Road, which is south of Moab.
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He was the one to make a post about its disappearance on his Instagram story on Saturday night.
“Apparently the monolith is gone. Nature returned back to her natural state I suppose.”
The Instagram post by the Bureau of Land Management set off a thread of comments by users, who speculated on whether it might “show up somewhere else”.
Some wondered if, perhaps, it was a “relic and secret location for some alien cult ceremonies”.
Others simply agreed that whatever its origins, it had provided a “cool diversion while it lasted”, and that it was “nice to have some mysteries in life.
On Twitter, users were similarly intrigued by the disappearance of the monolith.
a mysterious metal monolith appearing and disappearing in the Utah desert amidst a global pandemic is a pretty good Pynchon/DeLillo plot point
— evan (@evanewashington) November 29, 2020
this is utah, random art installations appearing in the middle of nowhere is a local tradition
— Liam Thomas (@Junkmail_lt) November 29, 2020
A mysterious hidden sci-fi movie imbued steel monolith in the Utah desert may be one of the least insane surprises of 2020 & now it’s gone. #MonolithUtah
— Sasha Dryden (@SashaDryden) November 29, 2020
Has anyone looked for it on eBay?
— Tom Trainer (@moveology) November 29, 2020
Aliens needed it back. It was a rental.
— Frank Mitman (@frankdpi) November 29, 2020
via @NYTimes https://t.co/NrYAaHXr9e
It was a portal pic.twitter.com/vY93iZvIod
— Joshua Berman (@tranquilotravel) November 29, 2020
May be some hillibillies took it and sold as scrap metal , these are hard times.
— Riddick (@Rytwks) November 29, 2020
That’s what 2020 needed - another hoax!
— HeyArjun 🇮🇳 🇦🇪 🇬🇧 🇺🇸 (@arjun_hey) November 29, 2020
Some Sci-Fi millionaire placed it there - got it attention - & then took it back to his mom’s garage
The monolith lords giveth and the monolith lords taketh away.
— .... (@sayscate) November 29, 2020
Ok, we’ll if that’s not extraterrestrial involvement, I don’t know what is. pic.twitter.com/VtjUa7LAez
— 🚀Greg (@politeANDfunny) November 29, 2020
Put it back! I need more hiking destinations! Please?
— G B (@Galina68632327) November 29, 2020
— Kae A Done (@kae_done) November 29, 2020