They considered the grizzly bear to be the most "terrifying" and "exciting of all the animals they encountered. However, it wasn't the appearance of these animals that really surprised them, but the shear numbers in which they roamed.
Successes: Categorized 122 new animals and 178 plants, mapped the geography, and achieved friendlier relations with the native. Failure: They did not find a route to the Pacific Ocean completely by river.
FOUND OTHER THINGS Aleutian Canada goose
Prairie dogs(barking dogs)
American goldfinch
American raven
Audubon's mountain sheep
Bull snakes
Black-billed magpie
Black-tailed prairie dog
Blue catfish
Bonaparte's gull
Brewer's blackbird
Broad-tailed hummingbird
Bull snake
Bushy-tailed woodrat
Cabanis's woodpecker
California newt
Channel catfish
Clark's nutcracker
Columbia river chub
Columbian black-tailed deer
Columbian ground squirrel
Columbian sharp-tailed grouse
Coyote
Cutthroat trout
Desert cottontail
Double-crested cormorant
Douglas' squirrel
Dusky horned owl
Eastern spiny softshell turtle
Eastern woodrat
Ermine
Eulachon
Forster's tern
Franklin's spruce grouse
Glaucous-winged gull
Goldeye
Gray jay
Greater white-fronted goose
Harbor seal
Harris' woodpecker
Hutchins' goose
Least tern
Lewis' woodpecker
Loggerhead shrike
Long-billed curlew
Long-tailed weasel
McCown's longspur
Missouri beaver
Montana great horned owl
Mountain beaver
Mountain goat
Mountain lion
Mountain quail
Mountain sucker
Mule deer
North American porcupine
Northern bobcat
Northern flicker
Northern pikeminnow
Northern plains striped skunk
Northern pocket gopher
Northern raccoon
Northern short-tailed shrew
Northwestern crow
Northwestern garter snake
Nuttall's (common) poorwill
Oregon bobcat
Oregon pronghorn
Oregon ruffed grouse
Oregon spotted frog
Pacific (northern) fulmar
Pacific loon
Pacific nighthawk
Pacific tree frog
Pigmy horned toad
Pinyon jay
Plains gray wolf
Plains horned toad
Plains western hognose snake
Prairie horned lark
Prairie rattlesnake
Prairie sharp-tailed grouse
Pronghorn antelope
Red fox
Red-necked grebe
Red-spotted garter snake
Richardson's blue grouse
Richardson's red squirrel
Ring-necked duck
Roosevelt elk
Sage grouse
Sauger
Sea otter
Shiras' moose
Starry flounder
Steelhead trout
Steller's jay
Striped skunk
Swift fox
Thirteen-lined ground squirrel
Townsend's chipmunk
Townsend's mole
Tundra swan
Water terrapin
Western badger
Western common crow
Western fence lizard
Western gray squirrel
Western grebe
Western gull
Western meadowlark
Western mourning dove
Western pileated woodpecker
Western rattlesnake
Western tanager
Western toad
Western willet
Western winter wren
White sturgeon
White-tailed deer
White-tailed jackrabbit
Yellow-bellied marmot
Lewis and Clark's full names are Meriwether Lewis and William Clark. Their famous journey lasted from 1804 until the fall of 1806.
Meriwether Lewis and William Clark were their names.
You might have the names wrong. They are: William Clark and Meriwether Lewis. Both were not brothers nor were they related.However, if you are referring to William Clark's son, his name was indeed Meriwether Lewis Clark. Clark had named his son after his friend Meriwether Lewis; but those two are father and son, and not brothers.up the Missouri River and into the Pacific Northwest.
Their full names were "Meriwether Lewis" and "William Clark." Both did not have a middle name.("Gable" is not William Clark's middle name. You're thinking of the American film actor William Clark Gable.)meriwether Lewis William clarkcontrary to popular belief,,,,,,William Clarke,actually spelled his LAST name with an E at the end,,Nicholas Biddle chose to omit that when he re-wrote the journals.
William Clark was born in the late 1700's. He married and had 10 children. He knew Meriwether Lewis from working with him in the white house. His older brothers name was George Rodgers Clark and his other brothers name was Johnathon. His parents names were Ann Rodgers and John Clark. He had 7 sons named Jefferson Kearny, William Gilbert JR., Meriwether Lewis Clark Sr. ( not the person he traveled to the passage way to the pacifc ocean with.), William preston, George Hancock, Julias Clark, and Edward Clark. He had 2 daughters named Mary Margret Clark and Harriet Clark. Whoever wrote this past answer is the stupidest person in the history of the world bcuz it states that William had 10 children then later it says he had 7 sons and 2 daughters. Excuse me but i am pretty sure 7+2=9. ... just saying! :{
They knew some of the plants and animals names
Lewis and Clark's full names are Meriwether Lewis and William Clark. Their famous journey lasted from 1804 until the fall of 1806.
William Clark and Merrlwethir Lewis
Meriwether Lewis and William Clark
Lewis and clark
it was me i discovered myself my names Lewis harding hahahhahahhahaha
Meriwether Lewis and William Clark were their names.
The Corps of Discovery traveled with Lewis and Clark, but unsure what everyones first name was.
Meriwether Lewis and William Clark
Judging by their names they were Jews.
You might have the names wrong. They are: William Clark and Meriwether Lewis. Both were not brothers nor were they related.However, if you are referring to William Clark's son, his name was indeed Meriwether Lewis Clark. Clark had named his son after his friend Meriwether Lewis; but those two are father and son, and not brothers.up the Missouri River and into the Pacific Northwest.
Their full names were "Meriwether Lewis" and "William Clark." Both did not have a middle name.("Gable" is not William Clark's middle name. You're thinking of the American film actor William Clark Gable.)meriwether Lewis William clarkcontrary to popular belief,,,,,,William Clarke,actually spelled his LAST name with an E at the end,,Nicholas Biddle chose to omit that when he re-wrote the journals.