Many people did. Here is a partial list: Hernando Cortes Lewis and Clark
Lewis and Clark explored the western half of the United States, including areas such as the Missouri River, the Rocky Mountains, and the Pacific Northwest. Their journey took them through present-day states like Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska, South Dakota, North Dakota, Montana, Idaho, Oregon, and Washington.
Lewis and Clark explored parts of what is now Nevada in 1805. They were hunted at this time by people representing Spain because Nevada was in Spanish Territory. The Spaniards thought Lewis and Clark were encroaching on their land.
Sacagawea is on the $1 coin, not the half. The denomination is DOLLAR, not DOLLOR. She was chosen to honor her service guiding the Lewis and Clark expedition that explored North America for the new United States.
Because Thomas Jefferson Ordered him to explore the southwest because Lewis and Clark did not, they just explored the north. NOT because he wanted to find his mommy -_-
No. Lewis and Clark were explorers sent out to explore the area of the Louisiana Purchase, a vast and mostly uncharted area of the central and western North America, in the early 1800s.
The river explored by Lewis and Clark, the Missouri River, is located in the Midwestern and Western United States. It runs through multiple states such as Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Nebraska, and Missouri.
Lewis and Clark found 170 new plants and 100 new animal species on their expedition of North America. They had also found the Rockies and nearly 50 Indian tribes.
Lewis and Clark and who the f*ck knows.
Spain, France, England, the Netherlands, and even Sweden explored parts of North America.
Spain, France, England, the Netherlands, and even Sweden explored parts of North America.
Lewis and Clark explored and documented vast territories in western North America, extending from the Mississippi River to the Pacific Ocean. They discovered and mapped new lands, encountering various Native American tribes and species of plants and animals previously unknown to European Americans. Their expedition significantly expanded knowledge of the region and paved the way for further exploration and settlement.