Peakbagger.com

Peakbagging Page for Edward Earl

Personal Climb Logs

The links below take you to dynamically generated lists of Edward Earl's peakbagging activity.

Social Networking

Reports showing a climber's buddies and other climbers. Click for More Info

Personal Lists

Lists personally created by Edward Earl. (Search for Lists from other climbers).

  • Personal Lists: Shows all lists created by Edward Earl. Includes Query Lists created using the Query Tool, and "Pick-and-Choose" Lists created by selecting individual peaks.
    • Search for Lists: Search across all lists hosted on the site, both "main" lists and those created by all climbers.
  • Wish List: A list of unclimbed peaks that are high-priority and/or have immediate climbing plans.

Time-Period Summary Reports

These reports show number of peaks climbed, highest point reached, and other statistics grouped by year or month.

User Created Content

US County High Point Links

Edward Earl has self-identified as interested in climbing to the high points of counties in the United States.

Click on photo for original larger-size version.
Edward Earl returning to camp after a successful climb of Snowfield Peak in the North Cascades (2012-07-08).
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Edward Earl

April 2, 1964 - Brooklyn, NY / June 19, 2015 - Jago River, AK

Edward Earl perished tragically on June 19, 2015 while crossing the Jago River in Alaska. He was on an expedition to climb Mount Isto (9,060’), the highpoint of the Brooks Range and the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, accompanied by three friends. After two unsuccessful attempts on Isto from the East and Northwest faces, the party was crossing the Jago to reach a landing zone to be picked up, but Edward was swept away and efforts to resuscitate him after rescue proved futile.

Edward was a scientific and mathematical genius, a violin player, a small plane pilot, a relentless traveler to the mountains of the world, and a kind and gentle soul who will be missed by all. Edward was born in New York City in 1964, and he grew up in Spartanburg, SC. He attended Furman University in Greenville, SC, where he earned a B.A. in Chemistry. Later, at the University of Utah, he earned a PhD in Computational Chemistry, his advisor considering him the most brilliant mind he ever taught. During his career in software engineering, at jobs in San Diego and Seattle, he wrote software to predict the shapes of molecules, to track space satellites, and to optimize internet search algorithms.

But Edward’s true love was the mountains. By 1986 he was climbing the major summits of the USA, including most state highpoints and iconic peaks like the Grand Teton and Mount Shasta. He also was an early pioneer of county highpointing, attainting 578 total, including all the county high points of AZ, CA, NV, NM, OR, UT, WA, and WY. In addition, he was a globetrotting climber with frequent trips to Latin America, Europe, Africa, and Alaska to climb peaks such as Orizaba, Chimborazo, Denali, Aconcagua, and many others. Additionally, he made serious attempts on Kilimanjaro, Mont Blanc, Mount Logan, and Mount Fairweather.

In the past decade he became more passionate about peaks with high topographic prominence, a subject of much of his mathematical research. His shining achievement was accomplished on August 18th, 2013, on Mt Prophet, WA, when he became the first person to summit all 149 peaks in the Lower 48 states with 4,000’ of prominence. He travelled for weeks at a time around western North America in his dusty blue pickup truck to meet friends at trailheads, camp, and hike to the summit of a nearby peak the next morning. Unstoppable, Edward would get back in his pickup and continue on to the next trailhead, and repeat the process for weeks on end. He was known on these trips for his diet of Pop Tarts, Ramen, and mac & cheese; his non-stop choice of blue jeans (even on snowy summits); and his general frugality.

When not in the mountains, Edward had other strong passions. An accomplished violinist, he played first violin in local orchestras wherever he lived and had a strong appreciation for classical music. He was a private pilot, and enjoyed flights of all sorts, whether at the controls or in the passenger seat of a bush plane in Alaska. In his spare time, he created a complex computer program called WinProm, which automatically calculated the prominences of thousands of peaks at once, based on digital elevation models. This program is used worldwide as an essential tool by many mountain data researchers.

Edward was a key contributor to Peakbagger.com and many of his database and user-interface suggestions are still visible on the site. The little gear and route icons were his idea, as was the concept of storing the contour interval in the database for peaks and cols, allowing different types of prominence calculations. He is also the main proponent of “county prominence peaks” and pioneered both the researching and climbing of those peaks across the USA.

Edward was an obviously brilliant mind, but he had no hubris about it. He was always happy to take time to explain to anyone some aspect of geometry, geography, astronomy, the physical sciences, or math. At the same time, he knew little of popular culture—he had to be told who Michael Jackson and Robin Williams were when they passed away. In his final months he was working on complex mathematical proofs at his new condo, just for fun. His mind, quite simply, worked on a higher level than most, yet he never came across as anything but a bright guy with many passions.

Most importantly, Edward was a kind and loving soul. His patience, childlike manner, unflappable calmness, and simple desires will be missed by all. He leaves behind his father, a brother, a sister-in-law, two nephews, and countless mountain lovers all over the world. Plans are underway to scatter his ashes on peaks dear to his heart.

Edward’s Personal Website

 

Quick Top 10 Lists/Peaks

Highest Priority Lists
ListPriority% Done
World Top 50 by Prominence118
World 1500 m (4921 ft) Prominence Peaks26.2
World 600 m (1969 ft) Prominence Peaks31.8
USA Lower 48 Peaks with 4000 feet of Prominence4100
CA 50 Finest5100
World Country High Points65.5
USA County High Points718.3
U.S. State High Points886
USA Lower 48 Peaks with 5000 feet of Prominence9100
Most Complete Lists
List# Done% Done
USA Lower 48 Peaks with 4000 feet of Prominence142100
USA Lower 48 Top 100 Peaks by Prominence100100
California County Prominence Peaks58100
California County High Points58100
USA Lower 48 Peaks with 5000 feet of Prominence57100
CA 50 Finest52100
5000 foot Prominence CoHPs - 48 States46100
High Points of Counties Crossed by the Pacific Crest Trail45100
Washington State County Prominence Peaks39100
Washington County High Points39100
Highest Peaks Climbed
PeakElev-ftLocationAscent Date
Aconcagua22841Argentina2006-01-28
Volcán Chimborazo20561Ecuador2003-02-12
Denali20310USA-AK2004-06-04
Volcán Cotopaxi19347Ecuador2003-02-09
Pico de Orizaba18491Mexico-Pue/Ver1996-11-30
Chacaltaya17700Bolivia1994-11-04
Volcán Iztaccíhuatl17103Mexico-Pue/Mex1996-11-28
Pico Bolívar16342Venezuela2004-01-28
Pico Humboldt16158Venezuela2004-01-26
Volcán Pichincha15696Ecuador2003-02-04
Most Prominent Peaks Climbed
PeakProm-ftLocationAscent Date
Aconcagua22841Argentina2006-01-28
Denali20146USA-AK2004-06-04
Pico de Orizaba16148Mexico-Pue/Ver1996-11-30
Mauna Kea13796USA-HI1998-04-19
Volcán Chimborazo13524Ecuador2003-02-12
Mount Rainier13246USA-WA1995-07-17
Volcán Tajumulco13058Guatemala2012-12-27
Pico Bolívar12982Venezuela2004-01-28
Cerro Chirripó12320Costa Rica2002-02-25
Mount Meru10400Tanzania2007-01-14
Overall Statistics and Ranks  (Updated every 24 hours)
P-Index: 595  (Rank #17/22492)Link to Peak List sorted by prominence
I-Index: 99  (Rank #20/22068)Link to Peak List sorted by isolation
E-Index: 946  (Rank #54/21714)Link to Peak List sorted by elevation
Ascents: 1609  (Rank #139/26016)Count of all logged ascents
Peaks/Points: 1487  (Rank #108/25918)Count of distinct peaks/points climbed
Peaks on Lists: 1280  (Rank #51/24576)Count of distinct peaks that are on lists
P100m Peaks: 1156  (Rank #58/24851)Count of peaks with 100m of promienence
      (See Prominence Summary Page for more prominence breakdowns)
Vertical Gain: 2,423,529 ft  (Rank #24/6508)Sum of all vertical gain hiked
Distance: 6,146 mi  (Rank #25/26016)Sum of all distance hiked
Trip Reports: 203  (Rank #321/10610)Count of posted trip reports
Days with Ascents: 300  (Rank #90/24014)Days with a new 100m prominence peak

     
    



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