On July 5, 1803, Lewis visited the arsenal atHarper’s Ferryto obtain munitions. He then rode a custom-made, 55-foot keelboat—also called “the boat” or “the barge”—down the Ohio River and joined Clark in Clarksville,Indiana. From there, Clark took the boat up the Mississippi River...
The True Account : A Novel of the Lewis and Clark and Kinneson ExpeditionsHoward Mosher
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...
On the Trail of Lewis and Clark: A Journey up the Missouri River. In 1804, Lewis and Clark and a band of adventurers called the Corps of Discovery embarked on one of the great expeditions in history, the exploration of th... P Lourie - Boyds Mills Press, Inc., 815 Church Street, Ho...
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...
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.
Fish Discoveries by the Lewis and Clark and Red River Expeditionsdoi:10.1577/1548-8446(1996)021<0006:fdbtla>2.0.co;2MoringJohn R.FisheriesMoring, J. R. 1996. Fish discoveries by the Lewis and Clark and Red River expeditions. Fisheries 21(7):6-12....
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
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