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A “MAGIC” MONOLITH has been discovered on a beach on the Isle of Wight, just days after similar structures were seen in the United States and Romania.
The pillar was seen in Compton Beach, on the west side of the island, over the weekend.
Island resident Alexia Fishwick said the discovery was “really quite magical.”
She told the PA news agency that it was “pure chance” that she found him.
“I’d read about Utah and then Romania, so I knew the meaning,” he said.
“A lot of people didn’t realize it.”
She said that people first thought that she had retouched the images.
The Isle of Wight monolith
Source: David Lowe / PA Images
Lee Peckham, a lawyer who lives on the island and who also saw the structure yesterday afternoon, said: “I saw it and wondered what it was and thought it was something quite strange to see on the beach!
“I was wondering who put it there and why.”
A metal building planted in the ground was first found in a remote part of Utah in late November.
It disappeared a few days later, and later two other shiny metal towers appeared in Romania and southern California.
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A portal in the #Island of Wight? #monolith #Utah #beammeup @VisitIOW pic.twitter.com/NpfE6zKp7r
– Alexia R Fishwick (@AlexiaRFishwick) December 6, 2020
An anonymous collective called The Most Famous Artist has taken credit for the monoliths in Utah and California.
He posted an image of the Utah monolith on Instagram, priced at $ 45,000 (€ 37,000).
However, when asked about the structure of the Isle of Wight, he said: “The monolith is out of my control at the moment. Good luck to all the hard-working aliens around the world to spread the myth. “
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