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Holley Mangold, 21, (CENTER) hopes to be on the U.S. Olympic weightlifting team, but is still a girly-girl at heart who loves makeup and is afraid of insects.
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Rev. Kevin Fast, a Lutheran minister in Cobourg, Ontario, lifted 22 women at once on June 18, 2011. The key, he said, was making sure they didn't move around on the platform.
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A picture from Matt Loughrey in May 2010 during one of his climbs on Croagh Patrick in Ireland. Loughrey has been climbing 365 days for charity.
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Victor Mooney, of Queens, N.Y., has failed on three previous attempts to row across the Atlantic Ocean. Even though he spent 14 days on a life raft on his most recent try in February 2011, he announced that he'll make a fourth expedition in December.
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Guy Fessenden is running 100 marathons in 140 days to raise awareness about the treatment of mental illness in this country. Fessenden's daughter, Suzanne, was diagnosed with schizophrenia 12 years ago. Fessenden started his journey Oct. 2 in Savannah, Ga., and hopes to finish Feb. 19 in Los Angeles.
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Edison Pena, center, one of the Chilean miners rescued last month after being trapped 69 days underground, crosses the finish line of the 41st ING New York City Marathon in Central Park on Nov. 7. Pena trained by jogging every day in the mine, 2,300 feet below ground in stifling heat and humidity.
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Roger Federer hits a winning between his legs during his opening-day match against Brian Dabul of Argentina at the U.S. Open tennis tournament in New York on Aug. 30.
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Detroit Lions football players pose Wednesday with fan Joe Paquette, 63, who walked nearly 430 miles, from the Upper Peninsula of Michigan to the team's training facility near Detroit. It took Paquette 17 days to complete the journey, averaging 32 miles a day.
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Firefighters and others pause for a moment of silence to honor those killed in the attacks of 9/11 before the start of the "Tour of Duty" run Aug. 12 at the Santa Monica Pier in California. A team of 30 runners will to run 4,600 miles in relay shifts 24 hours a day till they reach New York on Sept. 11.
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Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin sits in the cabin of a Be-200 firefighting aircraft some 250 km outside Moscow on Aug. 10. Russia fought a deadly battle to prevent wildfires from engulfing key nuclear sites as Putin took to the air in a water-bombing plane to join the firefighting effort.
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Ed Stafford of England left, shakes hands with guide Gadiel "Cho" Sanchez Rivera of Peru as they arrive at Marapanim in Brazil's Para state on Aug. 9. After 859 days and thousands of miles, Stafford became the first man known to have walked the entire length of the Amazon river.
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Charley French prepares for a triathlon during a training ride outside of Sun Valley, Idaho on Aug. 3. French once set a record at the Ironman triathlon in Hawaii and is a five-time world champ in a sport he took up 25 years ago (at age 60), just as he was helping American cyclist Greg Lemond win the Tour de France.
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Michele Guyot began construction of Guedelon Castle in central France in 1997 using only historically accurate building materials and techniques from the Middle Ages -- no electricity, power tools or excavators. Construction of the new "medieval" castle -- shown in this July 5 photo -- by some 50 craftsmen is expected to last about 25 years.
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Chris Lomen is rollerblading the 4,200 miles of road and sidewalk from Stillwater, Minn., to Maine to Key West, Fla., to help rebuild Haiti. The St. Olaf College graduate began his three-month journey on wheels June 29 and hopes to raise $100,000 for Outreach International.
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Amy Palmiero-Winters nears the finish line of the 2009 Mount Washington Road Race, a run to the summit of the northeast's highest mountain, in New Hampshire. In June 2010, Palmiero-Winters, who regularly runs ultra-marathons, became the first amputee to be named to the USA Track and Field team.
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Sailor Reid Stowe, right, landed his 70-foot schooner "Anne" and was reunited with his girlfriend Soanya Ahmad, and their son, Darshen, 23 months, whom he'd not yet seen, in New York on June 17. Stowe spent 1,152 days at sea on what he refers to as a "voyage of love."
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After his beloved dog Malcolm died of bone cancer, Luke Robinson and the Fuzzybutts (aka two Great Pyrenees named Murphy and Hudson) left Austin, Texas, in March 2008. They've been walking ever since. Robinson, 39, hopes his 2,300-mile, 16-state journey, which ends June 19 in Boston, will raise awareness about canine cancer, which affects one in three dogs.
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Chinese strongman Dong Changsheng wowed the audience at the Changchun Internationals Exhibition Center on May 20 by pulling a 1,200-pound plane with just his eyelids.
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South Korean mountaineer Oh Eun-Sun stands near base camp preparing for her ascent to the summit of the Himalayan peak of Annapurna in Nepal on April 9. Oh claimed the record as the first woman to scale the world's 14 highest peaks after reaching the summit of Annapurna on April 27.
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Jordan Romero became the youngest person to summit Carstensz Pyramid, Oceania's highest peak at 16,024 feet, in September 2009, as well as the youngest American to summit Mount Kilimanjaro. On May 22, 13-year-old Jordan reached the top of Mount Everest, part of his quest to reach the summits of the highest peaks on all seven continents.
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Katie Spotz, 22, of Mentor, Ohio, approaches the shore of Georgetown, Guyana, March 14, 2010. Spotz, who set out from Dakar, Senegal on Jan. 3, completed a solo journey across the Atlantic Ocean on Sunday to claim a record as the youngest person to accomplish the feat.
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Abby Sunderland, 16, departs on her sailboat, "Wild Eyes," from the Del Rey Yacht Club in Marina del Rey, Calif., on Jan. 23. Abby was attempting to be the youngest person to complete a nonstop, unassisted solo-circumnavigation of the globe by sea when a wave smashed the mast of her boat, stranding her in the Indian Ocean. A French fishing vessel rescued the teenager on June 12.
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In September, British skydiver Leo Dickinson, Indian Army officer and skydiver Ramesh Tripathi broke the record for highest parachute landing by dropping into a zone, which was 16,800 feet above sea level, at Gorakshep, near Mount Everest in Nepal.
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In August, country singer Jack Ingram set a new world record for most consecutive interviews in 24 hours by doing 215 press sessions to promote his latest album.
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Mike Perham, 17, became the youngest sailor to circumnavigate the world when he finished off his 28,000-mile journey on Aug. 27 in Cornwall, England.
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Paula Stephanson, seen here after swimming across Lake Huron, swam 35 miles to cross Lake Michigan on Aug. 24. She became only the second person to swim across all five Great Lakes.
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Melanie King of Middlesborough, England, is now a mother after successfully losing almost half her previous weight in just a few months. She finally gained a son after struggling to have a child for years and being denied the right to adopt due to her past size.
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Australian rider Robbie Maddison performs a backflip over Tower Bridge on July 13 in London.
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First-time mom Rebecca Longley, 20, was forced to deliver her own baby in the passenger seat of a racing car as her boyfriend, Andrew Mildenhall, drove to the hospital in Hampshire, England on June 10. The happy couple here shows off their healthy baby girl, Aaliyah.
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In February, 94-year-old great-grandma Harriet Shepard joined her family for a skydiving jump. Here, Shepard is shown with great-grandson Trevor Muir, 23, great-granddaughter Darcy Shepard, 18, and son Dave Shepard, 74, at Florida Skydiving Center in Lake Wales, Fla.
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Richard Donovan, a 42-year-old from Ireland, ran seven marathons on seven continents -- all in one week. He took on the challenge to help raise money for the crisis-plagued Darfur region of Sudan. Here, Donovan runs the first race, in Antarctica, on Jan. 31.
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Marcus Eriksen, left, and fellow eco-mariner Joel Paschal are towed into a Honolulu harbor Aug. 27, 2008, after a three-month, 2,600-mile voyage from Long Beach, Ca., in a raft made of salvaged materials. The raft, called JUNK, consisted of 15,000 plastic bottles and a Cessna 310 fuselage. The pair took the trip to raise awareness of ocean debris.
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Kent Couch lifts off from his gas station in Bend, Ore., in a lawn chair rigged with more than 150 giant party balloons. Couch traveled more than 200 miles across the Oregon desert in July 2008 before landing safely near Cambridge, Idaho.
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In May 2008, Neil Sauter began an eight-week trek across Michigan on stilts to raise awareness about cerebral palsy. Sauter, 24, suffers from a mild form of the disease.
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In January 2008, Tantric meditation master Wim Hof beat his own record for immersing his body in ice. Hof stood on a Manhattan street in a clear container filled with ice for an hour and 12 minutes -- four minutes longer than the record he set in 2004.
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Pakistan's Zafar Gill picked up a 135.7 pound weight with his ear in 2007.
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At the age of 14, Michael Perham became the youngest person ever to sail single-handedly across the Atlantic Ocean. He made the 2007 trip in seven weeks after setting off on the 3,500 mile journey from Gibraltar to Antigua aboard a 28-foot boat named Cheeky Monkey.
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Steve Vaught, aka "Fat Man Walking," walks along a New Jersey road in May 2006 just a few miles from New York at the end of his 3,000-mile, yearlong walk across America. Vaught began the trek from his Oceanside, Calif., home, at 410 pounds to lose weight and find peace of mind after accidentally killing two elderly pedestrians 15 years ago.
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Li Jianhua, who holds the world record for pulling a car the longest distance with his ear, performs his unique feat in Shanghai, China, in 2004. Li moved this 8,300-pound car 20 yards.
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In 2003, Lloyd Scott spent two weeks walking an underwater marathon in Scotland's Loch Ness. He submerged for about an hour at a time, taking rests in a boat. The former leukemia sufferer has taken part in many marathons for charity since receiving a life-saving bone marrow transplant in 1989. (Sources: AP, CNN, BBC)