peaceful manner and made wondrous discoveries in the meantime.
peaceful manner and made wondrous discoveries in the meantime.
In summary, I would like to recap how Bill Bryson had moved his family to New Hampshire and on a "walk" stumbled upon a sign declaring the existence of the Appalician Trail that spanned more than 2,100 miles. The AT covered fourteen states from Georgia to Maine.…
The video, Lewis and Clark: Part 1 directed by Kevin Burns, tells the story of the first exploration into unknown territory. Thomas Jefferson, the President of the United States at the time, was always curious about the West. Jefferson’s books spoke of a northwest passage that linked the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. It was believed that whoever could maintain that trade route would control the rest of the country and its future Jefferson expressed the desire to discover and understand the Missouri river and the Indians that lived along the banks. Therefore, placing great faith in his secretary, Meriwether Lewis, Jefferson assembled the corps of discovery in 1804 to survey the area.…
In cycling, due to the posture of the athlete, increased arterial pressures in the lower limbs may cause both a pressure and volume overload on the heart (O’Toole and Douglas, 1995). Intensive training and long endurance events are accompanied by some muscle damage, due to decreases in myoglobin and build up of lactic acid in the tissue (Armstrong, 1986). The VO2 max (aerobic capacity) is important in the transfer of energy. This requires an integration of the respiratory, cardiovascular and neuromuscular systems. Mahler et al (1982) reported that the respiratory system is not a limiting factor in marathon runners, finding no difference between their respiratory function and that of their sedentary controls. Therefore only the cardiovascular and the neuromuscular systems adapt to endurance training.…
John Colter was born in Augusta County, Virginia around 1744. Then in 1780 Colter and his family moved to Kentucky. In 1803 John Colter enlisted in the Lewis and Clark expedition as a hunter and a scout. One mission Lewis and Clark gave him was to find a lost private named George Shannon. He looked for George Shannon for seven days without giving up. When he was hunting he encountered three armed Indians but instead of surrendering he kept his rifle up and slowly walked toward them and asked them to go back to camp with him. They accepted to come with him. When the corps were on the return trip, John Colter met a group of white trappers and asked permission to stay with them, Lewis granted his request, so when the corps left Fort Mandan,…
The Oregon Trail The author of the book The Oregon Trail is Francis Parkman. Parkman was an American historian. This one of his many books on this topic. Parkman enrolled to Harvard when he was sixteen.…
In the two articles, “Into the Unknown” and “Lewis and Clark Revisited” by World Almanac have many similarities and differences. For example, these two article are similar because they both were along the Mississippi River. In addition, even though the reenactment was not shot in the exact location, the sites still looked identical. While there are some similarities, there are also many differences. For example, in “into the unknown” they traveled in a boat with oars while crossing waterways where in the reenactment they used a boat with a motor. Also, the first explorers covered themselves in bear grease to protect themselves from mosquitoes where in the reenactment they used rush pills. Finally, explorers first camped in camp wood Illinois…
How did the expedition of Lewis and Clark happen? What jolted it into existence? What happened during the journey that proved to be so influential? So many questions, all important to understanding the expedition of Lewis and Clark. Theirs' became one of the most significant explorations when it comes to American voyages as they brought back important geographical information.…
In the book a long walk to water, by Linda Sue Park, an 11 year old boy named Salva goes through some tough times in his life. What started it all was that his school was attacked. Salva had to leave his family behind and start his journey with random people that he had never seen before. He didn't know where he was going but they were trying to escape the war that was happening in his country. Later in his journey he finally gets to find one of his family members, his uncle. Salva and his group slowly grows and they get to a refugee camp and many years later when Salva has grown up he gets to go to America. When living there he starts a campaign to help build wells in south Sudan, where he grew up, to help everyone there have clean fresh water.…
Sacagawea, was a Lemhi Shoshone woman who helped Lewis and Clark complete their two year expedition. All the way to the northern plains through the Rocky Mountains to the Pacific Ocean and back. Lewis and Clark, probably ran into lots of tribes Sacagawea would have been really helpful because, she could translate and she had a baby, which let tribes know they were traveling in peace. Sacagawea was a highly skilled food gatherer. She used sharp sticks to dig up wild licorice, prairie turnips and wild artichokes that mice had buried for the winter.Some say she was captured according to history.com the Shoshone tribe were enemies of the gun-possessing Hidatsa tribe, who kidnapped Sacagawea during a buffalo hunt. Sacagawea was about…
On May 14th, 1804 Lewis and Clark launched their boats into the Missouri River at St.…
The journals kept by Meriwether Lewis and William Clark during their expedition were an extremely important part of the United States of America’s history specifically in the scientific field. Lewis and Clark explored North America to discover many new things in nature, find new possible trade routes, see potential threats to westward expansion, look at the possibility to invent new natural resources, and the list goes on and on. They also worked together with people of vast races and/or backgrounds which only increased their interest with the West. They were tremendously essential to this nation’s history because they were the first white men to undertake such a journey, make such a detailed map of their travels, and detail the wildlife…
For centuries, the Cherokee People lived peacefully in the mountainous regions of what is now called North and South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Tennessee, Virginia, West Virginia and Kentucky. In the book, 'The Trail of Tears', Dennis Brindell Fradin simply tells the story of how this Native American Tribe was systematically robbed by the government of the United States of America of its lands, its culture, and its…
One of the greatest American adventure stories started on February 28, 1803, when President Thomas Jefferson gained approval for his visionary project. This project was to explore the unknown West with a small expeditionary group. President Jefferson chose Meriwether Lewis and William Clark to head this expedition. Both Lewis and Clark had close ties to Jefferson. Meriwether Lewis was one of Jefferson's secretaries and William Clark was a close friend. The initial idea of the expedition was to include scientific inquiry, geographic mapping, and clearing the way for commerce, but the purchase of the Louisiana Territory, on April 30 1903, changed this purpose. The new mission focused more on diplomacy, which required the crew to communicate the transfer of sovereignty to every Indian tribe and foreign interest occupying the lands along the journey.…
Lewis and Clark met Charbonneau (husband of Sacagawea) and quickly hired him to serve as interpreter on their expedition. Sacagawea was chosen to accompany them on their mission.…
This site keeps the Lewis and Clark Expedition alive in the modern world. At the same time, it also gives comprehensive background about the exploration, including FAQs, a history of the expedition, and a roster and genealogy chart of participants. It could be especially important in developing game characters.…