Each of the six different images in the animation below is interactive. Click on any one before it fades away.
nder new management! In January of 2009 the ownership and management of Discovering Lewis & Clark® was officially transferred from VIAs Inc. to the Lewis and Clark Fort Mandan Foundation of Washburn, North Dakota. Our intention is not only to preserve and maintain the site produced by Joseph Mussulman since 1998, but also to undertake a series of new initiatives and historical investigations, and to introduce emerging technologies at appropriate times, in pursuit of our mission to make this the most comprehensive and useful Lewis and Clark website on the Internet.
We welcome serious suggestions, comments and queries from our readers via the "Contact" utility at left, above. We are eager to receive proposals for articles, photo essays, and other contributions to Discovering Lewis & Clark®. More about the Lewis and Clark Fort Mandan Foundation will be found on the Credits page, listed above at left.
David Borlaug, President,
Fort Mandan Foundation
Wendy Spencer, Vice President,
Fort Mandan Foundation
Clay Jenkinson, Editor & Director
Stephenie Ambrose-Tubbs, Assoc. Editor
Joseph Mussulman, Assistant Editor
New in November, 2009
lay Jenkinson, the new editor and director of Discovering Lewis & Clark®, is the author of the most recent featured addition to the site, Six Metaphors in Search of an Epic, in five parts: "Dubious Legacies," "Corn Mills and Canadians," "Markets and Mandans," "Two Views of Warfare," and "Six Metaphors for the Legacy."
Direct links to the successive parts of Clay's essay, as well as links to minor corrections and updates to other pages in Discovering Lewis & Clark® will be found at the "RSS News" button near the bottom of the Discovery Paths menu at left.
Soon to come
ome answers to those "Lingering Questions" about the design and navigation of dugout canoes, by William W. Bevis, scholar, author and veteran canoeist.
That famous "Trio of Pests" that plagued the Corps of Discovery during the summer of 1805, "equal to any three curses that . . . poor Egypt laiboured under," will be explored and interpreted at length.
Winter, 2010, "The Sonic Substance of the Lewis and Clark Trail."
One more page will be added to Robert Bergantino's series of essays on Lewis and Clark's exercises in Celestial Navigation
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