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Standing records prior to the 2024 European Athletics Championships World record Beatrice Chebet (KEN) 28:54.14 [2]: Eugene,United States: 25 May 2024 European record Sifan Hassan (NED)
R3 "Women's 5000 Metres All Time Top List at World Athletics" Retrieved 24 August 2024 . R4 " "National Records for Women" in the World Athletics Oregon22 Statistic Handbook (pages 809-810)" (PDF) .
The official world records in the 5000 metres, or 5000-metre run, are held by Joshua Cheptegei with 12:35.36 for men and Gudaf Tsegay with 14:00.21 for women. The first world record in the men's 5000 m was recognized by World Athletics (formerly called the International Association of Athletics Federations, or IAAF) in 1912. As of January 2024 ...
The 5000 metres or 5000-metre run is a common long-distance running event in track and field, approximately equivalent to 3 miles 188 yards or 16,404 feet 2 inches.It is one of the track events in the Olympic Games and the World Championships in Athletics, run over 12 + 1 ⁄ 2 laps of a standard 400 m track, or 25 laps on an indoor 200 m track.
15.24 meters – width of an NBA basketball court (50 feet) 18.44 meters – distance between the front of the pitcher's rubber and the rear point of home plate on a baseball field (60 feet, 6 inches) [126] 20 meters – length of cricket pitch (22 yards) [127] 27.43 meters – distance between bases on a baseball field (90 feet)
The A-10 Thunderbolt II is among the player-flyable aircraft in the 1989 video game U.N. Squadron. [23] The aircraft is also featured in the 1989 video game A-10 Tank Killer. [24] It has since appeared in the Ace Combat series [25] and is a study-level aircraft in the combat flight simulator DCS World. [26]
The film was released by RCA/Columbia Pictures Home Video in 1991. It was then re-released in 1995, as part of the Columbia Tristar family collection. It became available on DVD in 2001 by Columbia Tristar Home Entertainment. It featured the Gerald McBoing-Boing short, Gerald McBoing-Boing's Symphony, as a bonus feature. Sony then re-released ...
Nicholas Stephen Alkemade (10 December 1922 – 22 June 1987) was a British tail gunner in the Royal Air Force during World War II who survived a freefall of 18,000 feet (5,490 m) without a parachute after abandoning his out-of-control, burning Avro Lancaster heavy bomber over Germany.