Wow. Bad grammar kills. *Clark. ChaCha on!
The Lewis and Clark Trail is a highway. The path of the highway follows the approximate path of the journey taken by explorers Lewis and Clark. There is also a hiking trail called the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail. This route goes across 3,700 miles from Illinois to Oregon.
Yes, but it is unknown what it was marked with!
Lewis and Clark are important since they helped find a land path from the Pacific and strengthen America's Western expansion. If it weren't for Lewis, Clark, and Sacagawea ( Suh- cawg- uh- way- uh) America wouldn't be like this as it is today.
Find a waterway path to the pacific ocean, map the west, make peace with the indians are there three main goals and the last one im not sure about
Lewis was the main explorer who chose which path to take and Clark was the one to map the areas they traveled
Clark's return route differed from Lewis's primarily in its path and approach to the Missouri River. While Lewis followed a more direct route along the river, Clark took a more circuitous route, opting to explore the northern regions and navigate through different terrain. Additionally, Clark's expedition faced various challenges, including encounters with Native American tribes and the need to gather supplies, which influenced his trajectory compared to Lewis's more straightforward return. Ultimately, Clark's route provided valuable insights into the geography and peoples of the area.
There was no Oregon Trail during the time of Lewis and Clark's expedition in 1804. The beginnings of the trail, which led from Missouri to Oregon and Washington, date from 1811 but allowed only for travel by foot or horseback. Eventually the path was widened, and in 1836 the first wagon train took that route to Fort Hall, Idaho. The large surge of pioneers heading west did not occur until 1843.
Before Lewis met up with Clark, he began the expedition on August 30, 1803 in Pittsburgh PA. Lt. William Clark would offer to join Lewis on the expedition weeks later on October 13, 1803 at Camp Dubois (in present-day Indiana). From there, they sailed down the Ohio River towards St. Louis. In spring 1805, they continued to the headwaters of the Missouri River, struggled across the Continental Divide, and headed west along the Salmon, Snake, and Columbia Rivers to the Pacific. They landed at the mouth of the Columbia River, Astoria, Oregon. In total they had traveled 7,689 miles (13,532,640 yards; 40,597,920 feet).
Before Lewis met up with Clark, he began the expedition on August 30, 1803 in Pittsburgh PA. Lt. William Clark would offer to join Lewis on the expedition weeks later on October 13, 1803 at Camp Dubois (in present-day Indiana).The team departed St. Louis in May 1804 heading up the Missouri River. They would spend their first winter at Fort Mandan at the present site of Bismarck, North Dakota. In spring 1805, they continued to the headwaters of the Missouri River, struggled across the Continental Divide, and headed west along the Salmon, Snake, and Columbia Rivers to the Pacific. They returned to St. Louis the following year.And being that the expedition began in Pittsburgh, states they passed through would include: Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia, Indiana, Kentucky, Illinois, then Missouri, Iowa, Nebraska, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Idaho, Oregon and Washington.If you don't believe that the expedition really began in Pittsburgh instead of St. Louis, please refer to the related link which will lead you to the first entry of the Lewis and Clark Journals.
The purpose of the exploration of the Louisiana Purchase, also known as the Lewis and Clark Expedition, was to find a water or land path to the Pacific. Other reasons were to reinforce the American claims to the territory, to gather information about the natives in the territory, and to gather information on resources in the area.
The purpose of the exploration of the Louisiana Purchase, also known as the Lewis and Clark Expedition, was to find a water or land path to the Pacific. Other reasons were to reinforce the American claims to the territory, to gather information about the natives in the territory, and to gather information on resources in the area.
their expidition came to a fork in the river and the crew thought they should go the northern rout but Lewis and clark thought they should take the southern fork. the southern fork turned out to be the correct path. the named the other river the Marias