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The mysterious disappearance of the monolith found on November 18 in the desert of Utah, United States, seems to have come to an end.
Ross Bernards, an adventure photographer, revealed through his Instagram account that four men came out of nowhere to dismantle the structure. The 34-year-old had driven more than six hours, along with a friend, to look at her and take photos of her.
“Around 8:40 pm, four men arrived and, working in pairs, they gave the monolith strong shoves, trying to tear it off the ground. One of them said ‘that’s why you don’t leave garbage in the desert'”, Bernards told the New York Times.
According to the story, the quartet of men succeeded and the structure landed on the ground with a crash. Later, they took her away in a wheelbarrow.
Bernards said he did not want to photograph the men because he “did not want to start a confrontation.”
However, his travel friend, Michael James, took some quick pictures with a cell phone: although they look blurry, they would show how men work to remove the metal structure.
However, the athlete from slackline (balancing sport in which a flat rope is clamped between two fixed points) Andy L. Lewis took credit for the disappearance of the monolith by posting a video on his Facebook page.
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