Every Olympic curling stone comes from a unique and tiny Scottish island better known for being the backdrop for an Open Championship course owned by Trump
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- Curling stones in the Olympics all come from the tiny Scottish island of Ailsa Craig.
- The island is better known as the backdrop to Trump Turnberry, a golf course that has hosted the Open Championship four times.
- The formation of the island was a perfect storm that created unique granite that is both smooth enough to glide on ice and strong enough to withstand collisions with other heavy stones.
Curling is the darling sport of the Winter Olympics.
Every four years fans become transfixed by athletes that look like us sliding and curling 40-pound rocks down a 50-yard ice track with often laser-like precision.See the rest of the story at Business Insider
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See Also:
- The US hockey and curling teams made history late Wednesday night, and conquered Canada in the process
- The twin sisters who were heroic in helping US Hockey win gold were scared that they would be cut from the team 4 months before the Olympics
- Tonga's shirtless flagbearer learned to cross-country ski in 12 months with the help of a venture capitalist who had failed to do the same 4 years ago
SEE ALSO: The best photos of the Winter Olympics so far
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