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Divide the distance the runner traveled by the number of seconds elapsed.
Multiplying 32.8 feet per second by 3,600, the runner traveled 118,080 feet per hour, or 22.4 miles per hour (5,280 feet equals 1 mile).
Multiplying 10 m/sec by 3,600 (the number of seconds in an hour), the runner traveled 36,000 meters per hour, or 36 kilometers per hour (1 kilometer equals 1,000 m).
Similar(57)
Until 1958, when road races were scarce in New York, the city's runners traveled to Boston once or twice a month to compete.
Local "runners" traveled with crews to guide them around town.
Moreover, sham-treated runners traveled a significantly lower distance in the open field (F1,44 = 4.45; p = 0.04; Fig. 4A), notably this effect was not due to a generally reduced locomotion in running mice (see below).
Once in Philadelphia, the runners and van traveled down a crowded Broad Street to the field, where West Point's superintendent, Lt. Gen. David H. Huntoon, presented each runner with the superintendent's coin.
But because the mayor waited until late Friday to make his decision, thousands of runners who had traveled to New York from around the globe made the trip for naught.
"Any inconveniences the cancellation causes me or the thousands of runners who trained and traveled for this race pales in comparison to the challenges faced by people in NYC and its vicinity in the aftermath of Sandy," Keflezighi said.
They traveled often as Runner's World expanded into new markets, and they'd get to know Rome or Stockholm or Cape Town while running.
They were permitted to carry water bottles — and keep their shoes on — but they were also under the watchful eye of security guards on foot and in cars that traveled alongside the runners.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com