| JUNGFRAU | 13,642-feet European peak first climbed by the Meyer Brothers in 1811 (8) |
| ETNA | 10,900-foot European peak |
| ALP | Mountain climbed by the von Trapps |
| MTSHASTA | Peak first climbed by E.D. Pearce |
| EVEREST | Peak first climbed by Hillary and Tenzing in 1953 (7) |
| GEORGEIV | Known as "the first gentleman of England", prince regent in 1811 and king in 1820 who commissioned John Nash to redesign the Royal Pavilion (6,1,1) |
| MCINTOSH | Red-skinned national apple of Canada, discovered by - and named after - an Ontario farmer in 1811 (8) |
| REAGENCY | Reactive power initially applied in 1811 to 1820 in Britain |
| KAMET | Mountain in the Himalayas that was first climbed by an expedition led by Frank Smythe in 1931 (5) |
| MATTERHORN | "King of Mountains" rising to 4,478 m, first climbed by Edward Whymper in 1865, resulting in the death of four of his crew on the way back down (10) |
| AVOGADRO | Italian chemist and mathematical physicist whose gas law formulated in 1811 was used to derive molecular weights and also a system of atomic weights (8) |
| NANGAPARBAT | At 8,126 metres high this mountain was first climbed by Hermann Buhl in 1953 (5,6) |
| CATHEDRALPEAK | *Yosemite site first climbed by John Muir in 1869 |
| OLDMANOFHOY | The isolated rock pillar, 450ft high, in the Orkneys, first climbed in 1966 |
| KILIMANJARO | Dormant volcano in Africa which is one of the Seven Summits of the world and which was first climbed in 1889 |
| EIGER | The north face of this Alpine peak was first climbed in 1938 |
| VINSON | Mountain massif in Antarctica which is one of the Seven Summits and was first climbed in 1966 |
| MONTBLANC | Peak first ascended in 1786 by Michel-Gabriel Paccard and Jacques Balmat (4,5) |
| TORONTO | Aware of rocky peak first in the city (7) |
| ELBRUS | Dormant volcano in Southern Russia which is one of the Seven Summits and whose east summit was first climbed in 1829 |