Oregon trail? Oregon trail?
the Oregon trail
They made a path called the Cumberland Gap or path
The "Oregon Trail" was not, literally, a single trail, it was any path taken to get from Missouri, Iowa or Nebraska to Oregon. It doesn't make a lot of sense to ask how wide it was, because different travelers followed slightly different routes.
The trail followed by Mormon pioneers mostly paralleled the Oregon Trail, at times merged with it, and at a few points diverged completely from it. The reason for following the general course of the Oregon trail was primarily because it had been mapped out by traders and trappers several years prior to their own exodus from Nauvoo, Ill. However, because of the adversarial relationship between the Mormons and many immigrants from both Illinois and Missouri (where an "extermination order" was still in effect at that time), the Mormon immigrants opted to follow a course that also followed the Platte river, but on the opposite side from most Oregon-bound parties.
Pioneers often experience a sense of excitement about charting new territories and the unknown. They may also feel fear or doubt due to the risks involved in forging a new path. Additionally, pioneers often feel a strong sense of determination and perseverance in overcoming obstacles and achieving their goals.
the path what is followed by the principal stress.
The path followed by the blood when it supplies and drains the heart muscle
The path followed by the blood when it supplies and drains the heart muscle
The curved path is called a trajectory
It is a imaginary path called Orbit.
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.