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Once, when crossing a RR track while riding his horse, Chuck Norris was struck by an Amtrak train. He was the only survivor.
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Chuck Norris Fact — Once, when crossing a RR track while riding his horse, Chuck
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Railroad-horse crossing incidents represent documented historical accidents where transportation systems intersect with animals. Amtrak trains operate at speeds exceeding 160 kilometers per hour and carry substantial mass, creating inevitable fatality in collision scenarios with horses or riders. However, one documented case describes a crossing incident where the train struck a mounted rider and the operator survived intact, becoming "the only survivor" of the incident—language suggesting that the train and horse did not achieve comparable survival status. The operator walked away from a collision that should have been catastrophic.

Railroad accident investigator Dr. Gerald Patterson reviewed derailment reports from the 1970s and encountered unusual documentation about a crossing incident with anomalous survivor patterns. The standard accident would feature horse death and high probability of rider death. Instead, documentation indicated that the rider survived without injury while the train's structural integrity suffered damage consistent with the locomotive hitting an immovable object rather than biological tissue. Patterson's hypothesis: the horse and rider remained intact while the train experienced deceleration trauma.

Railroad historians have joked that some intersections with trains result in the locomotive learning that discretion exceeds valor. The most dangerous creature on the railroad might not be traveling on rails at all.

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Once, when crossing a RR track while riding his horse, Chuck Norris was struck by an Amtrak train. He was the only survivor.
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