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Prominence Summary - Totals by Year

Abram Elwell's Peaks by Year/Prominence

YearTop 50Top 100Prominence CutoffsAll PeaksAll Points
6500 ft5000 ft3000 ft2000 ft1600 ft1000 ft300 ft100 ft
1997        1111
1999         111
2000     1112344
2006     1111111
2008     1112233
2009       12333
2010115577778111414
2011  11357912172022
2012   122337101313
2013    25557788
2014   1114467911
2015       14568
2016     13514212323
2017       11111
2019        2222
2020     1111111
Climbed1168152533407093110116
World Total501004991,4438,99430,89555,973169,5551,634,0267,798,709  
Percent2%1%1.2%0.55%0.17%0.08%0.06%0.02%0%0%  
YearTop 50Top 1006500 ft5000 ft3000 ft2000 ft1600 ft1000 ft300 ft100 ftAll PeaksAll Points
Prominence Cutoffs

 

Color Legend:

200 or more peaks
100-199 peaks
50-99 peaks
20-49 peaks
10-19 peaks
1-9 peaks

Notes:

  • This table shows counts by year and various prominence categories for a climber, plus overall totals.
  • The default is to count only unique peaks climbed, but there is a link above for showing counts of all ascents, which includes multiple ascents of the same peak.
  • Each column refers to a commonly used prominence cutoff for peaks. You can select either metric or foot-based ranges.
  • The "All Peaks" column shows all peaks that have any prominence at all, even those with 1 meter (or 1 foot) of prominence.
  • The "All Points" column will include "liner" highpoints and other zero-prominence spots in the Peakbagger database.
  • When using the Home or Foreign country options, note that peaks on the boundary of your home country are counted as "Home" but not as "Foreign", to avoid double-counting.
    • Also, for this page only, the Isle of Man, Jersey and Guernsey are considered to be part of the U.K. for Home/Foreign purposes.
  • Non-summit goal hikes to places not in the Peakbagger database are not counted in any column.
  • Global total counts for peaks in the ranges from 30m to 1000m (100 ft to 3000 ft) are taken from Andrew Kirmse's master prominence analysis.
  • There are no global counts for all peaks and all points. These totals would be impossible to determine or theoretically infinite.



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