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  • In 1993, Javier Sotomayor did what nobody can repeat to this day: he jumped over 8 ft

  • in height. But to become the absolute champion Javier would have to jump onto the Eiffel

  • Tower. Confused? I can understand! Let me explain.

  • Looking at the average human, you can’t help but wonder: how in the world did this

  • soft and, let’s be fair, clumsy-looking creature even get to the point where we all

  • rest now? We certainly aren’t the apex predators here. We aren’t the fastest runners, ask

  • cheetahs about that. We can’t properly swim or fly, we don’t succeed even in climbing,

  • but somehow, weve climbed to the top rank of nature itself. But we certainly didn’t

  • jump up there. You think jumpingyou think something

  • like a kangaroo. These animals don’t even walkthey hop. But, boy, are they good

  • at that! They can speed up to 44 mph over short distances and on distances over a mile

  • they will outpace the best human athletes that ever lived. All thanks to their mighty

  • legs, but some can also use their thick tails as a third leg to launch them high up. Kangaroos

  • can jump over two average people standing on top of each other.

  • You know Shaq? There is a mouse that can jump well over his head in one hop and it’s a

  • kangaroo mouse. In a way, it’s even cooler than what a kangaroo does because it’s tiny!

  • The kangaroo mouse owes its name to the big Australian brother, because it also moves

  • by jumping on the two hind legs. When it jumps 9 ft high it jumps 10 times its own body length!

  • It can change direction however it wants with every leap. Good luck catching this one!

  • Moving on to the oceandolphins are the best jumpers here. They can jump 10 ft over

  • the surface of the water, and there is a chance youve seen it in a dolphinarium at least

  • once. The cool thing about dolphins is that since they live in water, they have no need

  • to jump like that. They do it for sport and just for the fun of it, just like us.

  • Some animals may become champion athletes simply because they live beside nasty and

  • always hungry beasts like lions or cheetahs. Impalas certainly do, and they can leap over

  • a small bus. Add this to the fact that they run pretty fast, and you get the idea behind

  • that initial leapit keeps impalas safe. And Lions themselves are no joke either. Even

  • my cat can jump right on the fridge to get to the yummy treat. Double that height

  • this is how high a lion can jump. Thing like that really makes you hope you never get to

  • be in poor impalashooves. Mountain lions are even jumpier, though. When

  • you have to leap from cliff to cliff and you need to catch something like a mountain goat

  • for dinner, you know your whole life depends on every single jump you make. Mountain lions,

  • also known as Cougars and Pumas have to hop high – 20 ft high to be precise. Basically,

  • that means a puma can jump over giraffe’s head. Now that’s some hgh hoppin’!

  • Yet when it comes to long jumpingthere are too many cheaters! They cheat, because

  • they sorta can fly or glide. Even fish do that – a flying fish can jump up above the

  • water and use its fins to fly for over 40 seconds straight. Flying squirrels can glide

  • over a football field at once. And even flying snakes can do that by launching themselves

  • off the trees and slithering through the air in an S shape for over even longer distances.

  • My judgment on thatgliding is totally banned in this competition.

  • It may seem that if you would jump like a frog can, you would be able to hop onto the

  • Statue of Liberty easily. But here is a catchwe think frogs are good at hopping because

  • they jump really far, not high. When it comes to distance it’s around 40 to 50 times their

  • body length. The absolute leap-master though is American bullfrog, which can jump over

  • 7 ft. A frog-human superhero would jump over the whole wingspan of a Boeing 747 with this

  • ability! If I learned something from cartoons, it’s

  • that you should never try to catch the road runner. Youll go over the cliff and splat

  • in the canyon every time. But I also learned that rabbits are excellent at jumping. White-tailed

  • jackrabbit, in particular, is one of the mightiest jumpers you can ever meet. The best recorded

  • hop this fluffy long-eared pal ever performed would make it land right on top of a giraffe’s

  • head. Even mountain lions would learn to respect that. If a predator needs a concentrated leap

  • to give its best jump, rabbits would do that any second as soon as theyre startled.

  • And if I learned something else from cartoonsrabbits are easily scared! Except for

  • Bugs Bunny. Not scared that one. Grasshoppers can make all of the previous

  • contesters run for their money. Ever seen those catapults they use for legs? That’s

  • their musical instrument, but most importantly it’s a jumping machine capable of launching

  • them from any danger. I really didn’t want to get to this scary

  • part, but spiders jump too. And the worst thingthey can live everywhere. If you

  • want to assure your safety from themgo to Antarctica. But seriously, they are harmless

  • and extremely tiny, and kinda cute looking things. Their legs aren’t powerfulthey

  • can just expand like pistons, launching them up over 50 times their own length. It’s

  • like having boots with springs in them! Jumping spiders sure know how to have fun. “Barking

  • spiders are another thing entirely.[fart sound] But still, it’s nothing next to a froghopper.

  • This tiny insect jumps straight up 27.5 in, which is 100 times its body length. Among

  • the insects, it’s the jumpiest it possibly gets. Kangaroo with this kind of hopping power

  • would jump on the Great Pyramid of Giza. Let’s just say, human athletes definitely don’t

  • stand a chance beating that. But there is one contestant that can still

  • fight for the title of the best jumper in the world. A flea. It jumps only 10 in high,

  • but for something that small it’s as if a person could jump over a 250 ft tall building

  • or the Eiffel Tower. Its long legs allow it to jump 200 times its own body length,

  • and lift objects 150 times heavier than the flea itself.

  • Fleas are more like space rockets than insects, because while they launch into the air, they

  • go through a lot more acceleration force than a rocket does when taking off. And just like

  • astronauts, they can’t go on for a long time even if a tiny hole appears in their

  • sturdy armor. Overall, fleas are yucky, but in the jumping record charts, you need to

  • give credit where credit is due. They are the best jumpers in the whole world!

  • But trap-jaw ants can surprise even a flea. Not in how far and high they can jump, but

  • how fast. For an outside observer it will seem like a trap-jaw ant just disappears in

  • a fraction of a second. In reality, trap-jaw ants can open their jaws 180 degrees, store

  • a lot of energy inside their head and thensnap! When in danger, a trap-jaw ant aims

  • its head downwards, and launches itself up in the air. Faster than a speeding bullet!

  • Tiny plankton copepods are even more impressive than that, though they too play a bit dirty.

  • While living in water, they still jump through it, because being so tiny under the pressure

  • almost bans you from conventional swimming. Fortunately, copepods have more than capable

  • legs. They launch them forward with the velocity of 1,000 times their body length per second.

  • It’s one of the most powerful movements ever recorded in the whole animal kingdom.

  • I guess it would still have to come out of the ocean to beat a flea in this competition,

  • but in the water, it has no equal. I don’t know about you, but this whole topic

  • is making me kind of jumpy. Yes I said it. Hey, if you learned something new today, then

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In 1993, Javier Sotomayor did what nobody can repeat to this day: he jumped over 8 ft

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