no, absoluetly not.
In spring 1805, they continued to the headwaters of the Missouri River, struggled across the Continental Divide at Lemhi Pass, and headed west along the Salmon, Clearwater, Snake, and Columbia Rivers to the Pacific. They landed at the mouth of the Columbia River, Astoria, Oregon on November 7 1805. The day was rainy and foggy, and the Columbia River estuary was four or five miles wide and they could not see the Oregon side of the river or Point Adams at the mouth of the river in the distance. But they were close enough to have reached their goal.
Problems included cholera, no food, heat stroke and snake bites.
Shoshone
Snake bites, starvation, bandits, and disease
Some of the Rivers were: The Mississippi River The Missouri River The Red River The Yellowstone River There might be a couple more but hopefully these helped! :)
Snake River
The Willamette River is the longest river "in" the State of Oregon. The Columbia and Snake are both much longer but are not completely "in" the State of Oregon.
The Snake River forms part of Oregon's eastern border
snake
The Snake River is located in the Northwestern US in the states of Wyoming, Idaho, Oregon and Washington.
The Snake River
Hell's Canyon is on the Snake River on the Oregon-Nevada border.
The Snake River is a river which starts in Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming and travels through Idaho, Oregon, and Washington until it joins the Columbia River.
That would be Oregon
Missouri yellowstone des chutes big horn
No, the very long Snake River flows into the Columbia River, which itself flows down from Canada, then eventually dumps into the ocean near The Dalles, Oregon.
The Snake River dissects Êthe border of Oregon and Idaho. The water source for the river is the Rocky Mountains.