yes.
Being the guide for the lewis and clark expidition and leading them to the pacific ocean, To the islands and to whereever they want to go.
being the guide for lewis and clark also for leading them to the islands and to the pacific ocean basically to lead them were they want to go
what Lewis and clark wanted to accomplish was to map the entire Louisiana purchase
Lewis and Clark want it.
he Lewis and Clark expedition also met several French trappers, and more famously Sacajawea and her husband Toussaint Charbonneau when they wintered at the present site of Bismarck, North Dakota in 1804. However, they warned specifically by President Jefferson to stay away from British trappers as relations between the two countries were strained and he didn't want them to be led astray.
to explore the west :)
They wanted to find a direct water route to Asia, for trade.
Lewis and Clark's expedition fulfilled Thomas Jefferson's Continental vision because Jefferson want the U.S. to expand from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean and even though there was no "Northwest' passage" Lewis and Clark still discovered a way to get to the Pacific ocean through rivers branching out.
he didn't want their wives to be so sad
because he did not want to scare any animals
he wanted to see sampes of wildlife, maps of the territory and he wanted to find a waterroute to the pacific
To learn anything about anything, one should always go pick up a book. Check the author's credentials of course for accuracy, but books are an excellent source of just pure knowledge. It also helps, if you really want to delve deep into a subject, to find something about the subject that you like. Referring to Lewis and Clark, one can appeal to the "sense of adventure" or the time period itself, or the friendship and loyalty between Lewis and Clark and of course Meriwether Lewis and William Clark themselves. One can also appeal to Native American history. In any case, books and especially the Lewis and Clark Journals (which you can find online), written by the explorers, are an excellent source for learning about the expedition and its participators.