'Mysterious' Las Vegas monolith appears in desert
Shiny, reflective monolith found in desert near Gass Peak, north of Las Vegas
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A "mysterious monolith" has appeared in a desert north of Las Vegas.
The Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department says the shiny, reflective structure – similar to one found in Utah years ago – was spotted by its search and rescue unit near Gass Peak over the weekend.
"We see a lot of weird things when people go hiking like not being prepared for the weather, not bringing enough water... but check this out!" police wrote on X alongside an image of the monolith.
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The discovery comes months after a hiker in Wales captured a video of a mysterious "UFO"-like monolith on top of a hillside along the country’s border with England.
‘UFO’-LIKE MONOLITH IS FOUND IN WALES BY HIKER, VIDEO SHOWS
Craig Muir recorded footage showing the shiny object in March while hiking Hay Bluff near Hay-on-Wye, according to Storyful.
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"I come up here most days and I've never seen this before," Muir says in the video, adding that it "almost looks like a UFO."
Similar monoliths also have been found in Belgium, Romania and the Isle of Wight – an island in the English Channel.
MONOLITH VANISHES FROM REMOTE UTAH DESERT
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In November 2020, one of the monoliths, estimated at between 10 feet and 12 feet high, was found by Utah state wildlife employees who were counting sheep from a helicopter.
Bret Hutchings, the helicopter pilot, said it was "about the strangest thing that I’ve come across out there in all my years of flying," according to Salt Lake City's KSL-TV.
Authorities said at the time that the mysterious object was installed in the ground in a remote area with "no obvious indication" of who might have put it there, according to a press release from the Utah Department of Public Safety.
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Then a week later, another monolith was discovered in Atascadero, California, which is north of Los Angeles.
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It’s unclear who is behind the placement of the monoliths. A New Mexico artist collective claimed responsibility years ago.