Lana Del Rey becomes just the third woman in the history of the Billboard 200 chart to have an album spend at least 300 weeks on the survey. Her Born to Die clocks its 300th frame on the latest tally (dated Jan. 20), rising 148-141.

Since the Billboard 200 began publishing on a regular weekly basis in 1956, only two other albums by women have notched at least 300 weeks on the chart: Carole King's Tapestry (318 weeks) and Adele's 21 (359 weeks). Tapestry bowed in 1971 and spent 15 weeks at No. 1, and 21 arrived in 2011 and logged 24 weeks at the summit, the most for an album by a solo female.

Born to Die, Del Rey's debut full-length, bowed and peaked at No. 2 on the chart dated Feb. 18, 2012. The set has earned 3 million equivalent album units through Jan. 11, according to Nielsen Music, with 1.5 million of that sum in traditional album sales. The album is currently mostly powered by on-demand audio streams of its songs; in the latest tracking week (ending Jan. 11), it scored 5.5 million streams for its tracks.