In late 2020, the presence of a progression of metal segments, famously alluded to as stone monuments, was accounted for universally
Reports of these structures arose in the wake of the revelation of the Utah stone monument, a metal column that was found in a far off gulch in Utah, in the United States.
The Utah stone monument was a 3 m (9.8 ft)- tall column made of metal sheets bolted into a three-sided crystal, put in a red sandstone space ravine in northern San Juan County, Utah. It is imagined that the structure was intalled among July and October 2016, yet just pulled in media consideration after its reality was accounted for in November 2020 by state scientists who found it during a helicopter review of wild bighorn sheep.[1][2][3]
Not long after the Utah disclosure, reports arose via online media of comparable metal segments being found in numerous different spots all through the world, including areas across North America, South America, Central America and Europe. The roots of these structures changed; a few stone monuments were made by craftsmen enlivened by news inclusion of the first Utah column; others were made by neighborhood organizations for limited time purposes. A few stone monuments were thusly removed.[4] The stone monuments have been contrasted in the media with the Monolith that showed up in the 1968 sci-fi film, 2001: A Space Odyssey, offering ascend to hypothesis about an extraterrestrial birthplace, despite the fact that the wonder has likewise been seen as a furor or an Internet hoax.[5][6]
A places where monolits foun,
Belgium, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Italy, Netherlands, Norway, Poland, Romania, Russia, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom, Ukraine, Canada, United States, California, Colorado, Michigan, Nebraska, Nevada, New Mexico, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Texas, Utah, Washington, D.C. Australia, Panama, Colombia, and Paraguay