By swimming faster.
8, that's how he beat Mark Spits
Mark Spits is alive!
there are 550 types of spits
harrie spits is a very young child
If we do this under the same contents as running, such as saying the Usain Bolt is the fastest man on land because he holds the world record in the 100 meter, considered to be the fastest track event. If we follow that rule then currently the fastest person ever would be France's Frederick Bousquet. He currently holds the world record in the 50 meter freestyle, considered to be the fastest event in the pool. Another swimmer that is very close to him would be Brazil's Ceasar Cielo, he was the previous record holder until Bousquet broke it. If you would like to look at it as the fastest all around swimmer than it would have to be Michael Phelps or Mark Spitz. These two have set world records in more events than anyone else with spits i believe having 5 (when he was swimming) and Phelps at one point (Prior to him not swimming many of his best events at the World Championships) held 8. Both of those include relays
Spits - newspaper - was created on 1999-06-21.
In the end, it helps you get to the captain. Then the scary whale (the white one) eats you. Then he spits you out with the rest of the survivors. Then the captain gives you the medal for SOS island and you win.
Frits Spits's birth name is Frits Ritmeester.
You need 1.500 points.
First things first. You know beaches, headlands, and spits. Well, maybe not spits. Anyways, spits are long finger like beaches that reach out into the ocean. Okay, back to the point of the question. Beaches, headlands, and spits were all made by WAVES which are caused by wind. Waves are a type of erosion. What makes them, will destroy them. Basically, waves made beaches, headlands, and spits, but, waves will then again destroy them.
Some famous spits in the UK include the White Cliffs of Dover, the spits at Blakeney Point in Norfolk, and the spits at Studland Bay in Dorset. These spits are important coastal landforms that provide habitat for wildlife and protect the coastline from erosion.