The Nome run of the Iditarod is typically completed at an average speed of around 3 to 4 miles per hour, which is considerably slower than the modern Iditarod race, where teams often average speeds of 5 to 7 miles per hour. Factors such as trail conditions, weather, and the physical condition of the dogs influence these speeds. Overall, the Nome run reflects the more rugged and challenging terrain faced by mushers in earlier years compared to the more competitive modern race.
The Nome Serum Run traveled about 674 miles in just under 5 and a half days at an average speed of around 6 mph. In comparison, the fastest modern Iditarod average speed was achieved by in 2021 by Dallas Seavey at around 9.3 mph. This means the Nome Serum Run was over 3 mph slower on average than the fastest modern Iditarod race.
No If the computer runs faster then it runs faster not slower
About half. The word "average" would be the midpoint of all values, so half would be faster than average and half would be slower than average, unless a range for "roughly average" was set.
faster
no. It matters how old it is. No matter if it runs faster or slower.
slower
Slower
slower
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faster
If it goes back it is slower, if it goes forward it is faster
only faster not slower.