Naismith's Rule
In 1892 a Scottish Mountaineer by the name of William Naismith devised a way of estimating the time it would take to complete a route based on distance. Quite simply he stated that it should take one hour to walk 3 miles, and adjusting a half hour for every 1000ft of ascent.
1 Hour = 3 miles + 0.5 hours /1000 feet
1 Hour = 5 km + 0.5 hours /300 m
This is a very simple rule, and assumes quite a few things. Firstly, it assumes a steady rate of 3 miles per hour, which is a fairly steady pace (Naismith was reportedly a very fit guy). Secondly, it assumes a fairly straight path and does not account for any obstructions.
Improvements / Exceptions / Adaptations
Many people realized that Naismith's rule, although simple was not very accurate. The calculation does not account for rough terrain, carrying loads, fitness level, and many other variables that could very much alter estimated times. Some people realizing this simply factored on adding 25-50% on to the estimated time. Others tried to further elaborate on Naismith's Rule.
A man named Bob Aitken decided that 5km/h was optimistic and only realistic in very optimal conditions, and therefore stated that 4km/h should be used for all other terrain.
Eric Langmuir in Mountaincraft and Leadership further elaborated on Naismith's rule to account for descent:
5 kilometres per hour
+1 hour per 600m ascent
-10 minutes per 300m descent for slopes between 5 and 12 degrees
+10 minutes per 300m descent for slopes greater then 12 degrees.
Another very simple variation on this rule:
4 km per hour +30 sec per contour line crossed
Yet another variation:
5 km/h easy going terrain
3 km/h easy scrambling
1 km/h rough terrain (sand, snow, brush)
+1h / 500m elevation up
+1h /1000m elevation down
+1h /5h fatigue
Another rule known as the Backpacker's Rule estimates 3.6km/h or 1 metre/sec
The Trantor Correction
Phillip Trantor also made corrections for fitness level. His corrections are based on how many minutes it takes a person to climb 300m in a 800m walk, and comparing that to how many hours quoted by the Naismith's Rule, giving you the modified result. To furthur compound this you should drop a fitness level if your are carrying a 20kg pack, walking into a headwind, travelling at night, or ground conditions are poor.
One thing the Trantor Correction does account for is fatigue. If plotted out, you will notice that fatigue seems to make its most obvious impact around the 10h mark.
Conclusion
Route planning is a very important aspect to any hike, or survival situation. However, above are only rough estimations, and the only way to accurately determine the time is will take is to know your speed, and route. Next I may try and elaborate on these estimations. It is also worth it to note that these calculations are based on Scottish terrain, and universities have found that in the Munro mountains the Naismith rule is within 25% accuracy.
