skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics
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skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics
Summary
skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics is an Olympic sports discipline event[1]. It draws 2 Wikipedia views per month (olympic_sports_discipline_event category, ranking #144 of 947).[2]
Key Facts
- skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics is in the country of Canada[3].
- skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics's image is recorded as Martins Dukurs, Jon Montgomery, and Alexander Tretiakov.jpg[4].
- skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics's instance of is recorded as Olympic sports discipline event[5].
- skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics's follows is recorded as skeleton at the 2006 Winter Olympics[6].
- skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics's followed by is recorded as skeleton at the 2014 Winter Olympics[7].
- skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics's location is recorded as Whistler Sliding Centre[8].
- skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics's part of is recorded as 2010 Winter Olympics[9].
- skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics's Commons category is recorded as Skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics[10].
- skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics's has part is recorded as skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics – men's[11].
- skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics's has part is recorded as skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics – women's[12].
- skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics's point in time is recorded as +2010-00-00T00:00:00Z[13].
- skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics's sport is recorded as skeleton[14].
- skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics's Freebase ID is recorded as /m/04y80wj[15].
- skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics's organizer is recorded as International Olympic Committee[16].
- skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics[17].
- skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics's number of participants is recorded as {'amount': '+48'}[18].
- skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics's topic has template is recorded as Template:Skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics[19].
- skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics's sports season of league or competition is recorded as skeleton at the Winter Olympics[20].
- skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics's Google Doodle is recorded as 2010-vancouver-olympic-games-skeleton[21].
Why It Matters
skeleton at the 2010 Winter Olympics draws 2 Wikipedia views per month (olympic_sports_discipline_event category, ranking #144 of 947).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 20 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[22]