Article

Story Map highlights salmon in the Snake River

Salmon jumping up a river. Inset of story map featuring columbia River and OR WA cost with short paragraphs.
The story map takes online visitors through the journey of salmon along the Snake and Columbia Rivers and on to the Pacific Ocean.

Story Map: NPS. Salmon photo: Marvina Munch for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

About this article: This article was originally published in the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail Annual Report 2022.
Dry grasses on the hills above the Snake River. A town is faintly visible along the river.
A view of the confluence, or joining, of the Clearwater and Snake Rivers in the distance. From this point in Idaho, this water eventually drains into the Columbia River and eventually the Pacific Ocean.

Photo: NPS

Article by: Ryan Cooper. Geographer, Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail

This year, the Lewis and Clark National Historic Trail released a new story map highlighting significant issues impacting an important species along the trail. As part of the Virtual Student Federal Service (VSFS) program, Carolyn Subramaniam developed a story map entitled Dams and Salmon: Struggling to Survive in the Snake River. This story map is a web resource that integrates interactive maps, text, and other multimedia to share information on how four federal dams impact salmon in the Lower Snake River of the Pacific Northwest.

STORY MAP

Dams and Salmon: Struggling to Survive in the Snake River

Visit the Story Map

Part of a series of articles titled Lewis and Clark Trail 2022 Annual Report.

Lewis & Clark National Historic Trail

Last updated: January 4, 2023