probably
Yes someone did get lost on the Lewis and Clark expedition.
Lewis got lost
they ate nothing. they just traveled and just kept going to find their lost treasure
the Corps only lost one man on the entire journey. Sgt. Floyd died early on, most likely from a burst appendix, according to historians.
Yes. She helped Lewis and Clark through raging rivers, dreadful cliffs, and rugged mountains. If Sacajawea never exist, Lewis and Clark would be lost. Sacajawea, helpful and considerate, shown the way for Lewis and Clark. Therefore, Sacajawea was a great guidance for Lewis and Clark on their expedition.Please Do Not Change.
Sacagawea is mostly known for helping Lewis and Clark on their expedition exploring the Louisiana Territory for President Thomas Jefferson. America had just gotten that land from Britain after the Revolutionary War. Lewis and Clark were two former soliders. Sacagawea was a shoshone indian girl who took care of her baby while helping Lewis and Clark. She helped them go over mountains and showed them paths inbetween mountains. Without her Lewis and Clark would have got lost and died. Sacagawea treated ingured people. She save Clark when he got bitten by a snake. She was very important.
Yes, the Lewis and Clark expedition passed through what is now Montana during their journey to the Pacific Ocean in the early 19th century. They crossed into the present-day state of Montana in 1805 after traveling through what is now North Dakota.
I think Lewis and Clark would have gotten lost because they had never been in that area and no clue as to the safest way to get through the mountains. Sacagawea was their guide and she knew how to bypass mountains and avoid dangerous animals therefore keeping Lewis and Clark away from most danger giving them a safe passage to where they wanted to go.
Iron Jacket's granddaughter was called Sacagawea. She was a Lemhi Shoshone woman known for her indispensable role as a guide and interpreter for the Lewis and Clark Expedition. Sacagawea's knowledge of the terrain and ability to communicate with various Native American tribes were crucial to the success of the expedition.
Sacagawea was his long lost sister and she was Lewis and clark's friend, so he gave them horses
1.) She became valuable as a guide in the region of her birth, near the Three Forks of the Missouri 2.) Served as a great interpreter between the expedition and her tribe, the Shoshone, when the expedition reached that area. 3.) Quieted the fears of other Native Americans, for no war party traveled with a woman and a small baby. 3.) She traded horses so they could get over the Rocky Mountains. 4.) On May 14th, 1805 a great gust of wind tipped one of their white pirogues over and inside were the papers, instruments, books, and medicine. As Charbonneau panicked, it was Sacagawea who stayed calm and gathered up the articles that were floating out into the river. As Lewis said, "The Indian woman, to whom I ascribe equal fortitude and resolution with any person on board at the time of the accident, caught and preserved most of the light articles which were washed overboard." 5.) After reaching the Pacific, Lewis and Clark split up on July 3, 1806 during their return trip. Sacagawea, her child and Charbonneau went with Clark and she guided them perfectly through the Bitterroot Valley, through Lost Trail Pass to Big Hole Pass.
knife river North Dakota is exactlly 5 miles and 45 feet long and that is where Lewis and clark found sacageweas lost baby