http://www.lewisandclark-2004.com/naturalhistory.shtml-carmen_f_bby-
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.
Antelope bush
Aromatic Aster
Aromatic Sumac
Bearberry
Black greasewood
Blue Flax
Buffaloberry
Bur Oak
Broom Snakeweed
Canada Milk-vetch
Common Horsetail
Common Juniper
Common Monkey-flower
Creeping Juniper
Curly-top gumweed
Dwarf Sagebrush
Eastern Cottonwood
False Indigo
Fire-on-the-Mountain
Fringed sagebrush
Golden currant
Gumbo evening primrose
Indian tobacco
Lanceleaf sage
Large-flowered Clammyweed
Long-leaved Sagebrush
Meadow Anemone
Missouri milk-vetch
Moundscale
Needle-and-thread grass
Pasture sagewort
Pin Cherry
Ponderosa Pine
Purple Coneflower
Purple Prairie-clover
Rabbitbrush
Raccoon Grape
Red false mallow
Rigid Goldenrod
Rocky Mountain Beeplant
Rough Gayfeather
Shadscale
Silky Wormwood
Silver-leaf Scurfpea
Snow-on-the-mountain
Spiny Goldenweed
Thick-spike Gayfeather
Western Red Cedar
White Milkwort
Wild Alfalfa
Wild Four-o'clock
Wild Rice
Wild Rose http://www.lewisandclark-2004.com/naturalhistory.shtml
Aromatic Sumac
Bearberry
Bitterroot (1806)
Black greasewood
Blue Flax
Breadroot (May 5, 1805)
Buffaloberry
Bur Oak
Broom Snakeweed
Canada Milk-vetch
Common Horsetail
Common Juniper
Common Monkey-flower
Cottonwood tree (June 12, 1805)
Creeping Juniper
Curly-top gumweed
Dwarf Sagebrush
Eastern Cottonwood
False Indigo
Fire-on-the-Mountain
Fringed sagebrush
Golden currant
Gumbo evening primrose
Indian tobacco
Lanceleaf sage
Large-flowered Clammyweed
Lewis's syringa
Lewis's wild flax
Long-leaved Sagebrush
Meadow Anemone
Missouri milk-vetch
Moundscale
Needle-and-thread grass
Osage orange
Pasture sagewort
Pin Cherry
Ponderosa Pine
Prickly pear cactus
Purple Coneflower
Purple Prairie-clover
Rabbitbrush
Raccoon Grape
Red false mallow
Rigid Goldenrod
Rocky Mountain Beeplant
Rough Gayfeather
Shadscale
Silky Wormwood
Silver-leaf Scurfpea
Snow-on-the-mountain
Spiny Goldenweed
Thick-spike Gayfeather
Western Red Cedar
White Milkwort
Wild Alfalfa
Wild Four-o'clock
Wild Rice Wild Rose
http://www.lewisandclark-2004.com/naturalhistory.shtml-carmen_f_bby-
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.
Antelope bush
Aromatic Aster
Aromatic Sumac
Bearberry
Black greasewood
Blue Flax
Buffaloberry
Bur Oak
Broom Snakeweed
Canada Milk-vetch
Common Horsetail
Common Juniper
Common Monkey-flower
Creeping Juniper
Curly-top gumweed
Dwarf Sagebrush
Eastern Cottonwood
False Indigo
Fire-on-the-Mountain
Fringed sagebrush
Golden currant
Gumbo evening primrose
Indian tobacco
Lanceleaf sage
Large-flowered Clammyweed
Long-leaved Sagebrush
Meadow Anemone
Missouri milk-vetch
Moundscale
Needle-and-thread grass
Pasture sagewort
Pin Cherry
Ponderosa Pine
Purple Coneflower
Purple Prairie-clover
Rabbitbrush
Raccoon Grape
Red false mallow
Rigid Goldenrod
Rocky Mountain Beeplant
Rough Gayfeather
Shadscale
Silky Wormwood
Silver-leaf Scurfpea
Snow-on-the-mountain
Spiny Goldenweed
Thick-spike Gayfeather
Western Red Cedar
White Milkwort
Wild Alfalfa
Wild Four-o'clock
Wild Rice
Wild Rose http://www.lewisandclark-2004.com/naturalhistory.shtml
http://www.lewisandclark-2004.com/naturalhistory.shtml-carmen_f_bby-
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.
Antelope bush
Aromatic Aster
Aromatic Sumac
Bearberry
Black greasewood
Blue Flax
Buffaloberry
Bur Oak
Broom Snakeweed
Canada Milk-vetch
Common Horsetail
Common Juniper
Common Monkey-flower
Creeping Juniper
Curly-top gumweed
Dwarf Sagebrush
Eastern Cottonwood
False Indigo
Fire-on-the-Mountain
Fringed sagebrush
Golden currant
Gumbo evening primrose
Indian tobacco
Lanceleaf sage
Large-flowered Clammyweed
Long-leaved Sagebrush
Meadow Anemone
Missouri milk-vetch
Moundscale
Needle-and-thread grass
Pasture sagewort
Pin Cherry
Ponderosa Pine
Purple Coneflower
Purple Prairie-clover
Rabbitbrush
Raccoon Grape
Red false mallow
Rigid Goldenrod
Rocky Mountain Beeplant
Rough Gayfeather
Shadscale
Silky Wormwood
Silver-leaf Scurfpea
Snow-on-the-mountain
Spiny Goldenweed
Thick-spike Gayfeather
Western Red Cedar
White Milkwort
Wild Alfalfa
Wild Four-o'clock
Wild Rice
Wild Rose http://www.lewisandclark-2004.com/naturalhistory.shtml
Aromatic Sumac
Bearberry
Bitterroot (1806)
Black greasewood
Blue Flax
Breadroot (May 5, 1805)
Buffaloberry
Bur Oak
Broom Snakeweed
Canada Milk-vetch
Common Horsetail
Common Juniper
Common Monkey-flower
Cottonwood tree (June 12, 1805)
Creeping Juniper
Curly-top gumweed
Dwarf Sagebrush
Eastern Cottonwood
False Indigo
Fire-on-the-Mountain
Fringed sagebrush
Golden currant
Gumbo evening primrose
Indian tobacco
Lanceleaf sage
Large-flowered Clammyweed
Lewis's syringa
Lewis's wild flax
Long-leaved Sagebrush
Meadow Anemone
Missouri milk-vetch
Moundscale
Needle-and-thread grass
Osage orange
Pasture sagewort
Pin Cherry
Ponderosa Pine
Prickly pear cactus
Purple Coneflower
Purple Prairie-clover
Rabbitbrush
Raccoon Grape
Red false mallow
Rigid Goldenrod
Rocky Mountain Beeplant
Rough Gayfeather
Shadscale
Silky Wormwood
Silver-leaf Scurfpea
Snow-on-the-mountain
Spiny Goldenweed
Thick-spike Gayfeather
Western Red Cedar
White Milkwort
Wild Alfalfa
Wild Four-o'clock
Wild Rice Wild Rose
Antelope Bush Aromatic Aster
Aromatic Sumac
Bearberry
Bitterroot (1806)
Black greasewood
Blue Flax
Breadroot (May 5, 1805)
Buffaloberry
Bur Oak
Broom Snakeweed
Canada Milk-vetch
Common Horsetail
Common Juniper
Common Monkey-flower
Cottonwood tree (June 12, 1805)
Creeping Juniper
Curly-top gumweed
Dwarf Sagebrush
Eastern Cottonwood
False Indigo
Fire-on-the-Mountain
Fringed sagebrush
Golden currant
Gumbo evening primrose
Indian tobacco
Lanceleaf sage
Large-flowered Clammyweed
Lewis's syringa
Lewis's wild flax
Long-leaved Sagebrush
Meadow Anemone
Missouri milk-vetch
Moundscale
Needle-and-thread grass
Osage orange
Pasture sagewort
Pin Cherry
Ponderosa Pine
Prickly pear cactus
Purple Coneflower
Purple Prairie-clover
Rabbitbrush
Raccoon Grape
Red false mallow
Rigid Goldenrod
Rocky Mountain Beeplant
Rough Gayfeather
Shadscale
Silky Wormwood
Silver-leaf Scurfpea
Snow-on-the-mountain
Spiny Goldenweed
Thick-spike Gayfeather
Western Red Cedar
White Milkwort
Wild Alfalfa
Wild Four-o'clock
Wild Rice Wild Rose
Aromatic Sumac
Bearberry
Bitterroot (1806)
Black greasewood
Blue Flax
Breadroot (May 5, 1805)
Buffaloberry
Bur Oak
Broom Snakeweed
Canada Milk-vetch
Common Horsetail
Common Juniper
Common Monkey-flower
Cottonwood tree (June 12, 1805)
Creeping Juniper
Curly-top gumweed
Dwarf Sagebrush
Eastern Cottonwood
False Indigo
Fire-on-the-Mountain
Fringed sagebrush
Golden currant
Gumbo evening primrose
Indian tobacco
Lanceleaf sage
Large-flowered Clammyweed
Lewis's syringa
Lewis's wild flax
Long-leaved Sagebrush
Meadow Anemone
Missouri milk-vetch
Moundscale
Needle-and-thread grass
Osage orange
Pasture sagewort
Pin Cherry
Ponderosa Pine
Prickly pear cactus
Purple Coneflower
Purple Prairie-clover
Rabbitbrush
Raccoon Grape
Red false mallow
Rigid Goldenrod
Rocky Mountain Beeplant
Rough Gayfeather
Shadscale
Silky Wormwood
Silver-leaf Scurfpea
Snow-on-the-mountain
Spiny Goldenweed
Thick-spike Gayfeather
Western Red Cedar
White Milkwort
Wild Alfalfa
Wild Four-o'clock
Wild Rice Wild Rose
By the end of the expedition, Lewis and Clark found and categorized 122 new animals and 178 plants, mapped the geography, and achieved friendlier relations with the natives. However, they did not find an all water route to the Pacific Ocean.List of plants discovered: http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_plant_life_did_Lewis_and_Clark_find_on_their_expeditionList of animals discovered: http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_animal_life_did_Lewis_and_Clark_encounter_during_their_expedition
a few things I know are . . .they found medical plants, new species of animals and several passes through the Rocky Mountains.
Sacajawea accompanied Lewis and Clark to try to find the Northwest passage in the West. Back then, the Americans in Lewis's and Clark's time thought that the West was a great deserted plain. Lewis and Clark were sent, along with some others, to explore. They found different plants, animals, and land marks. Some of these were different types of flowers, the Rocky Mountains, and buffalo. They also met more Native Americans. At the end Lewis and Clark did not find the Northwest passage, because it does not exist. But they discovered many other things.
They knew some of the plants and animals names
Lewis and Clark were both born in Virginia .
Well Lewis and his co- commander William Clark has done one of the most epic expedition in history. He and Clark discovered over 177 different plants and animals! They even got to name some or i think all of those plants and animals. They met many different Indian tribes like Blackfeet,Shoshone, Manana's Perce', and many more.
Meriwether Lewis and William Clark led the epidition, but some say that Lewis was the main leader.
Sacajawea accompanied Lewis and Clark to try to find the Northwest passage in the West. Back then, the Americans in Lewis's and Clark's time thought that the West was a great deserted plain. Lewis and Clark were sent, along with some others, to explore. They found different plants, animals, and land marks. Some of these were different types of flowers, the Rocky Mountains, and buffalo. They also met more Native Americans. At the end Lewis and Clark did not find the Northwest passage, because it does not exist. But they discovered many other things.
By the end of the expedition, Lewis and Clark found and categorized 122 new animals and 178 plants, mapped the geography, and achieved friendlier relations with the natives. However, they did not find an all water route to the Pacific Ocean.List of plants discovered: http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_plant_life_did_Lewis_and_Clark_find_on_their_expeditionList of animals discovered: http://wiki.answers.com/Q/What_animal_life_did_Lewis_and_Clark_encounter_during_their_expedition
lewis and clark
lewis got shot
In Camp Wood, Fort Catosp and Fort Mandan were some tribes Lewis and Clark stayed with for the winter?