The Lewis and Clark Expedition began in 1804, when President Thomas Jefferson tasked Meriwether Lewis with exploring the lands west of the Mississippi River that comprised the Louisiana Purchase. Lewis chose William Clark as his co-leader for the mission. The excursion lasted over two years. Along...
The True Account : A Novel of the Lewis and Clark and Kinneson ExpeditionsHoward Mosher
当当中华商务进口图书旗舰店在线销售正版《海外直订Lewis and Clark and Their Wild West Expeditions - Biography 6th Grade 刘易斯和克拉克以及他们的西部探险——6年级儿童传记》。最新《海外直订Lewis and Clark and Their Wild West Expeditions - Biography 6th Grad
Leadership and Discovery: Lessons from the Lewis and Clark Expedition More importantly, in the years since Lewis and Clark's return, the story of their journey has become our epic and has assumed a unique place in our national identity; few Americans know anything of similar expeditions led by...
The dispersal and introduction of nonindigenous aquatic species have often been attributed to the release or escape of baitfish and other biota from anglers' bait buckets. Using data obtained through two mail surveys of bait vendors, bait samples from retail locations, vendor interviews, a creel su...
W. (1983) The journals of the Lewis and Clark expedition. University of Nebraska Press.Moulton, G.E., ed. 1987. The Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, vol. 3. Lincoln: University of N...
ON THE TRAIL OF GIANTS EXPEDITIONS LARGE AND SMALL, ON LAND AND WATER, SEEK TO SEE WHAT LEWIS AND CLARK FIRST SAW IN 1805Diane Daniel, Globe Correspondent
Whereas Lewis and Clark were briefly trained but conscientious amateurs, the Red River party included naturalist Peter Custis. Both expeditions discovered new species of fishes, which were later formally described by others, but the detailed descriptions of the Lewis and Clark Expedition are much more...
doi:doi:10.1577/1548-8446(1996)021<0014:ITOABV>2.0.CO;2John R. MoringtaylorFisheriesMoring, J. R. 1996. Fish discoveries by the Lewis and Clark and Red River expeditions. Fisheries 21(7):6-12.
John Colter was an American trapper-explorer, the first white man to have seen and described (1807) what is now Yellowstone National Park. Colter was a member of Lewis and Clark’s company from 1803 to 1806. In 1807 he joined Manuel Lisa’s trapping part