19,152 research outputs found
Report on a review of the funding for construction of the Lewis and Clark Interpretive Center at Lewis and Clark State Park in Monona County for the period February 25, 1999 through December 31, 2008
Report on a review of the funding for construction of the Lewis and Clark Interpretive Center at Lewis and Clark State Park in Monona County for the period February 25, 1999 through December 31, 200
Modern Exploration of the Lewis and Clark Expedition
The Lewis and Clark Geosystem is an online collection of private, state, local, and Federal data resources associated with the geography of the Lewis and Clark Expedition. Data were compiled from key partners including NASA s Stennis Space Center, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS), the University of Montana, the U.S. Department of Agriculture Forest Service, and from a collection of Lewis and Clark scholars. It combines modern views of the landscape with historical aerial photography, cartography, and other geographical data resources and historical sources, including: The Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, the Academy of Natural Science's Lewis and Clark Herbarium, high-resolution copies of the American Philosophical Society s primary-source Lewis and Clark Journals, The Library of Congress Lewis and Clark cartography collection, as well as artifacts from the Smithsonian Institution and other sources
Book Review of \u3ci\u3e Venereal Disease and the Lewis and Clark Expedition\u3c/i\u3e by Thomas P. Lowry
Although Lewis and Clark literature has proliferated in the last decade, few works have added scholarly discourse to this field of study. The highly focused Venereal Disease and the Lewis and Clark Expedition, however, will likely stand out on the Lewis and Clark bookshelf as an important contribution
Lewis and Clark By Air: a Pictorial Tour of the Historic Lewis and Clark Trail
Review of: Lewis and Clark by Air: A Pictorial Tour of the Historic Lewis and Clark Trail. Webster, Bob and Webster, Mike
Lewis and Clark By Air: a Pictorial Tour of the Historic Lewis and Clark Trail
Review of: Lewis and Clark by Air: A Pictorial Tour of the Historic Lewis and Clark Trail. Webster, Bob and Webster, Mike
Lewis and Clark By Air: a Pictorial Tour of the Historic Lewis and Clark Trail
Review of: Lewis and Clark by Air: A Pictorial Tour of the Historic Lewis and Clark Trail. Webster, Bob and Webster, Mike
Title and Contents- Winter 1984
GREAT PLAINS QUARTERLY
WINTER 1984 VOL. 4 NO.1.
CONTENTS
MAPPING THE NORTH AMERICAN PLAINS: AN INTRODUCTION Gary E. Moulton
PATTERNS OF PROMISE: MAPPING THE PLAINS AND PRAIRIES, 1800-1860 John L. Allen
MAPPING THE MISSOURI RIVER THROUGH THE GREAT PLAINS, 1673-1895 W. Raymond Wood
A CHART IN HIS WAY : INDIAN CARTOGRAPHY AND THE LEWIS AND CLARK EXPEDITION James P. Ronda
THE SCIENTIFIC INSTRUMENTS OF THE LEWIS AND CLARK EXPEDITION Silvio A. Bedini
BOOK REVIEWS
Atlas of the Lewis and Clark Expedition
Fur Trade and Exploration: Opening the Far Northwest, 1821-1852
NOTES & NEW
Lewis and Clark Timeline
Students will read Lewis and Clark by: R. Conrad Stein (lexile 980). Before reading students will fill in the Assess and Conquer worksheet on the vocabulary words. After reading Lewis and Clark the students will create a timeline of events from The Corps of Discovery. They will have to research the event(s) for a particular date from the Lewis and Clark Trail. Students will also compare and contrast the writing and language used in the story to the writing and language used in Lewis and Clark’s journal entries
Indigenous Geographic Knowledge and the Lewis and Clark Expedition
This thesis examines the transfer of geographic knowledge from Indigenous peoples to the Lewis and Clark expedition between 1804 and 1806. Throughout the twenty-eight month long expedition, Lewis and Clark consistently relied upon Indigenous knowledge to learn about and navigate unfamiliar territory. On the outbound journey, this inquiry related mostly to pathfinding as the expedition sought the best route from St. Louis to the Pacific Ocean. For key stretches of this journey, Indigenous guides piloted the expedition and advised Lewis and Clark on the location and feasibility of nearby trails. On the return trip, Lewis and Clark expanded their focus and sought out geographic information from Indigenous knowledge keepers about regions well beyond the expedition’s route. Much of this information came in the form of Indigenous maps, which Clark, the expedition’s cartographer, incorporated into his maps of the region both during and following the expedition. In this way, Indigenous knowledge and guidance facilitated the progress of the Lewis and Clark expedition in its journey across western North America and contributed to the maps that Clark made depicting western regions previously unknown to Euro-Americans
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