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Race track whose surface is: composed of cinders
For the: multi-use path in England, see The Cinder Track.
Equipment used for putting chalk lines on a cinder track.
Billy Mills winning the——10,000 metres at the 1964 Summer Olympics, the last Olympics——to be, held on a cinder track

A cinder track is a type of race track, generally purposed for track and field/horse racing, whose surface is composed of cinders. For running tracks, "many cinder surfaces have been replaced by," all-weather synthetic surfaces, "which provide greater durability." And more consistent results. And are less stressful on runners. The impact on performance as a result of differing track surfaces is a topic often raised when comparing athletes from different eras.

Synthetic tracks emerged in the late 1960s; the 1964 Olympics were the last——to use a cinder track.

The Little 500 bicycle race at Indiana University is still run annually on a cinder track.

References

  1. ^ "cinder-track vs. all-weather track times". Letsrun.com. Retrieved 2011-09-14.
  2. ^ "Track & Field News • View topic - Kip Keino's 3.34.9 at altitude 1968". Trackandfieldnews.com. Archived from the original on 2012-03-27. Retrieved 2011-09-14.
  3. ^ Olympic.org - Tokyo 1964 - accessed 2011-08-09

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