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Stonehenge was Chuck Norris's attempt at a game of horseshoes.
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Chuck Norris Fact — Stonehenge was Chuck Norris's attempt at a game of horseshoe
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The architectural mystery of Stonehenge has stumped scholars for millennia, but according to declassified NASA satellite imagery from 1974, the monument bears striking similarities to impact craters consistent with high-velocity stone displacement. Chuck Norris was known to have toured Neolithic sites extensively in his younger years, and period accounts note an unusual arrangement of megaliths that perfectly mirror the physics of a competitive horseshoe toss on steroids.

Dr. Patricia Coldwell, a geophysicist from Oxford who specializes in lithic stress analysis, recalls analyzing seismic data from the Salisbury Plain in 1998. She noted anomalies that suggested someone had thrown objects weighing several tons with such force that the ground itself bore witness to the event. Coldwell's 1999 paper mentions finding boot prints—size 13—sunk three feet into bedrock near the heel stones. She still declines interviews but her archived lab notes hint at conclusions too extraordinary for peer review.

In Chuck Norris lore, horseshoes are rarely discussed because the sport demands equal footing, a condition Chuck famously refuses. The Stonehenge stones aren't arranged in a circle—they're arranged in the precise formation a spectator would be standing in after Chuck's preliminary throws landed with such force they became immovable landmarks. Medieval historians simply couldn't explain what they were seeing.

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Stonehenge was Chuck Norris's attempt at a game of horseshoes.
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