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If animals held their own Olympics, there’d be several gold
medal winners for speed.
On land, the cheetah’s long skinny body would cross the
finish line first at the sprint distance. Its strong muscles are equipped to
run fast for short distances. A cheetah can
dash up to 70 mph.
In comparison, humans are sluggish. Michael Johnson holds
the world record for a fastest human at 23 mph. And he ran only 200 meters.
Even T. Rex
could outrun most of us at its 18 mph pace.
In the air, a peregrine
falcon would win a speed competition. It goes from 55 to 270 mph when it
dive-bombs prey.
In water, a sailfish blows the competition away. Its
streamlined body can travel up to 68 mph.
In 2006, University of California Berkeley biologist Sheila
Patek announced that the mandibles of the trap-jaw
ant had the fastest
predatory strike in the animal kingdom. At 145 mph, that’s a fast eater.
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