The fastest runners often come from groups that have practiced running for many generations, just like kids who play a game every day get better at it.
What's special about some people?
Why does that group stand out?
In some groups, running is part of life, it's how they move, how they play, and even how they work. Over time, this practice makes them faster and faster, just like how kids who ride bikes every day get better at riding than those who only ride once in a while.
So when we see the fastest runners, many of them are from groups that have had these special tools (strong legs, fast hearts) and lots of practice, it’s not magic, it's teamwork between nature and hard work!
Examples
- A child wonders why most sprinters look similar.
- A parent hears about Usain Bolt and wants to know why he's so fast.
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See also
- How are fingerprints formed?
- How do DNA and RNA work together to create proteins?
- How does AI assist in the discovery of genetic diseases?
- How does DNA actually determine our traits?
- How does CRISPR gene editing actually change DNA?