Yosemite Decimal System

E278667

The Yosemite Decimal System is a widely used North American rating scale that classifies the difficulty and technical challenge of hikes, scrambles, and rock climbs.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Yosemite Decimal System canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (47)

Predicate Object
instanceOf climbing grade system
hiking difficulty rating system
alsoKnownAs YDS
appliesTo hikes
scrambles
technical rock climbs
assesses overall technical challenge of a route
characterizes exposure
need for protection
technical difficulty
classificationBasis hardest move or short sequence on a route
comparedWith British traditional climbing grade system
French sport climbing grade system
UIAA climbing grade system
countryOfOrigin United States of America
surface form: United States
definesScaleFrom Class 1
definesScaleTo Class 5
developedFrom Sierra Club grading practices
doesNotDirectlyMeasure objective hazards like rockfall
required physical endurance
goal provide consistent difficulty ratings across routes
hasComponent Class 1
Class 2
Class 3
Class 4
Class 5
hasNotableFeature decimal subdivisions within Class 5
focus on free climbing difficulty
influenced guidebook route ratings in the United States
sport climbing grading in North America
isCommonStandardIn Canadian climbing guidebooks
United States climbing guidebooks
isSubsetOf climbing grading systems
originatedIn Yosemite National Park
relatedTo protection rating systems
seriousness ratings for climbs
scope single-pitch and multi-pitch routes
standardizedBy American climbing community
timePeriod mid-20th century
usedBy guidebook authors
hikers
mountaineers
rock climbers
usedFor hiking difficulty classification
rock climbing difficulty classification
scrambling difficulty classification
usedIn North America

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

The Dawn Wall difficultySystem Yosemite Decimal System