Chief's hat similar to those Lewis and Clark purchased from the Clatsop, and a magpie and purple coneflower, two species first recorded for science by the Expedition.
Thomas Jefferson hoped the Corps of Discovery would provide a window onto the West. The Lewis and Clark Expedition was to observe and record everything, from the languages of the Indians to the dates when plants flower.
In preparation for the journey, Lewis studied with the best scientists in Philadelphia.
In fulfilling Jefferson’s charge, the explorers became capable amateur scientists. The Corps of Discovery made meticulous notes of natural environs, documenting the diversity and uniqueness of plants and animals, weather, natural cycles, and the vitality of the natural world. Through diligent documentation, comparisons of their scientifc observations to current conditions can capture visions of the past.
As the Corps of Discovery traveled, they pressed plants, dried the fur of animals, and wrapped them all in oilcloth to protect them from rain and river water. They wrote detailed descriptions and sometimes drew what they saw around them. Clark sketched the courses of the rivers.
In 1806, back in Washington, Lewis laid out the map Clark had drawn and he and Jefferson looked onto the West. It would be many years before the rest of the world had the same opportunity. The official Expedition journals and Clark’s map were not published until 1814, eight years after the journey.
The science of the expedition still allows us, 200 years later, to peer into the West of the early 19th century.
Locations:Boston African American National Historic Site, Capitol Reef National Park, Glacier National Park, Golden Gate National Recreation Area, Lewis & Clark National Historic Trail, Rock Creek Park, Theodore Roosevelt National Park, Yellowstone National Park, Yosemite National Parkmore »
Offices:Climate Change Response Program
Many Americans are reluctant to talk with one another about climate change. This may have a chilling effect on addressing its impacts in and outside national parks. Online information and storytelling could encourage meaningful dialogue.
Northwest Tribal nations have developed climate change action plans to protect their historical and contemporary relationships with the land and its cultural resources.