The top speed of an elephant at full run is 25 mph (40.25 kmph). If it could maintain this speed for a full 10 minutes - which is not possible - an elephant can run up to 4.17 miles (6.7 km) in 10 minutes!
I guess that would totally depend on the speed of the dog. A greyhound or a whippet is going to easily outdistance a pug or a bulldog.
Since a wildebeest can run up to 55 km/h, so in 10 minutes it can run over 9 km.
it depends on the breed
The Elephant Princess ended on 2011-10-06.
elephants can go up to 25mph elephants can walk/run 40kmh
yes, they are i think so!!!!!! ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ The average woolly mammoth reached between 2.7 m (9 ft) and 3.2 m (10 ft). The average male African elephant reaches between 3.2 m (10 ft) to 4 m (13 ft). To answer your question, no, the African elephant is bigger than the woolly mammoth was.
Crocs and Gators have been recorded to run for short distances at speeds of up to 25MPH, but these speeds only last for a few minutes. If the alligator is simply moving across land without haste, it can go pretty far but alligators do get tired easily. Until they need to eat or cool off, alligators can travel on land but not too far.
An elephant's trunk can hold up to 8.5 litres(2.2 gallons) of water.
An ostrich can run 16,093 meters in 10 minutes.
They can 150 yards in 10 minutes.
An ostrich can run 16,093 meters in 10 minutes
You would run 4.17 miles in 10 minutes.
To work this out, you need to realise that there are 10 more minutes in the hour (than the 50 in the question). The question could also read as, "If you had an extra 10 minutes, how far could you run?" To work out how far you could go in 10 minutes, simply divide 5.3 by 5 (this is because 50 minutes / 10 minutes = 5 5.3 / 5 = 1.06 You then need to add the 1.06 to 5.3 (because 50 minutes + 10 minutes = 1 hour) 5.3 + 1.06 = 6.36km
The answer is one mile. The man is running one third of 30 mph which is 10 mph. 6 minutes is 1/10 of an hour so he can run 1/10 as far as he could in an hour. 1/10 of 10 is one.
At 2 mph it will take you 60 mins to run 1 mile. Therefore after 10 mins running you will have covered (10/60) *2 = 0.33 of a mile.
If you could sustain that speed, 1.2 kilometres.
Kevin runs 2 miles in 10 minutes, that is, he takes 10 minutes to run 2 miles. [That may sound a trivial step, but will help solve similar examples where the numbers give complicated answers]. So he takes 5 minutes to run 1 mile. He has 45 minutes, or 9 times the number of minutes. So he runs 9 times the distance, that is, 9*1 = 9 miles.
To run 1600 meters at a pace of 10 and a half minutes per mile requires 10 minutes 26.4 seconds.
10 mph
10 minutes on the train, 7 minutes driving.