Triangles indicate locations of mountains found by the search
Hover cursor over a triangle for name of top
Red/Green triangles indicate mountains/tops I/you have ascended/not ascended
Triangle size gives some indication of mountain height... 3000ft+ 2000ft+ 1000ft+ <1000ft
Double-click on map to re-centre and zoom in (or use mouse wheel)
Pan the map using mouse to drag, or use navigation buttons
Click on a triangle for more details, i.e...
Mountain name (click for page showing details of summit (opens a new window)) Mountain height (metres / feet) Mountain type (see list below) Mountain rank (Hewitts only) e.g. Carrauntoohil = 1 Date of ascent (if logged)... ...click on date or (add log) to log ascent (if signed in) Links to OS Map (via Get-a-map or Multimap), and aerial view via GoogleMaps or Virtual Earth
H:Hewitt; h:sub-Hewitt M:Marilyn; m:sub-Marilyn; x:deleted Marilyn C:Historic County top
Type - see Map Help panel for meanings of abbreviations
Click on column headings (e.g. Name of Top) to re-order the list, and click again to reverse order
Click on symbol next to Rank/Type to indicate its position on the map
Click on a Mountain Name for page showing details of summit (opens a new window)
Metres and Feet - height of summit above sea level
GPS ID - 6 character ID used in the GPS files which you can download from this site
Grid Reference (see Disclaimer) - Click on a grid ref for OS map courtesy of Multimap (opens a new window)
Letters in brackets after grid ref show how it has been derived: g=recorded by GPS receiver; g2=averaged from 2 recordings (etc); t=grid ref of trig pillar (derived from OS website); e=estimated from map (i.e. no actual readings); e6=estimated to 6 digits only Please contact the author with any you have recorded, including a brief description of the actual point recorded - the more readings, the greater the accuracy of the grid ref
Date of Ascent - my/your personal log
Summits displayed in red are the ones I/you have ascended