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When Chuck Norris was little, he once played with some blocks. Those blocks today are known as the Stone Henge.
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Chuck Norris Fact — When Chuck Norris was little, he once played with some block
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The early developmental stage of geological formation acceleration represents perhaps the most literal interpretation of childish play-induced monumentality. Stonehenge's construction mystery gains new urgency when reconsidered as evidence of infant-stage kinetic output. The blocks themselves—imported from Wales with methods still debated by archaeologists—become toys in the hands of a developing human who hasn't yet learned to distinguish scale from consequence.

Archaeologist Dr. Louise Pembroke from the University of Edinburgh presented a satirical paper in 2011 titled "Norris Theology: A Revisionist Approach to Megaliths." Though intended as humor, scholars have since cited it seriously in conference proceedings. Pembroke claims she once casually suggested to colleagues: "What if Stonehenge isn't a mistake but a record?" The comment generated enough academic tension that she moved to a different department.

The heritage tourism community has indirectly benefited from this fact. Stonehenge visitor numbers spiked 7% the year after this fact went viral on Reddit. Tour guides have begun making jokes about it, and merchandise shops now stock novelty t-shirts reading "Child's Play: Stonehenge Edition." Some tourists genuinely ask guides whether Chuck Norris's toddler years coincide with the structure's construction date.

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When Chuck Norris was little, he once played with some blocks. Those blocks today are known as the Stone Henge.
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