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The Lewis
& Clark Photo Album

Bison
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Pronghorn
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Globemallow
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Stream With Deer
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Twisted Stump
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Prickly Pear Blooms
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Introduction:
As Lewis and Clark made their way west, they observed and recorded
plants, animals, geology, weather patterns and other scientific
phenomena which would be of interest to President Jefferson and
other scientists. As they traveled they could not help but be
impressed by the simple beauty of the sights they saw. Just as
their expedition was a scientific one, it also became an aesthetic
one. When Lewis stood in awe at the foot of the Great Falls in
Montana on June 13, 1805, he wished for the pencil of Salvatore
Rosa (a famous artist) or the pen of Thompson (a well-known writer).
He wanted to "be enabled to give to the enlightened world some
just idea of this truly magnificent and sublimely grand object,
which has from the commencement of time been concealed from the
view of civilized man; but this was fruitless and vain." The words
and journals of Lewis, Clark and their men may not have been up
to the task of adequately describing every scene and object they
encountered, but they spurred a curiosity and interest in the
American West which has yet to subside.
The following pictures were taken along the
Lewis and Clark Trail in 1975-76 by photographer David Muench for
the National Park Service's Museum of Westward Expansion in St.
Louis. Muench traveled the trail, arriving at the sites of the explorer's
camps at the same time of year as they themselves were there. The
result is an acclaimed series of photographs which show the beauties,
from panoramas to tiny insects and flowers, seen by the explorers
200 years ago. Muench fulfilled Lewis' wish at the Great Falls in
1805, to "give to the world some faint idea of an object which at
this moment fills me with such pleasure and astonishment . . . "
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