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Search : air gun
Creator : Lewis, Meriwether
Source : The Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, Volume 2
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Your search returned 14 results from all items Search Only Journals

September 17, 1803 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • ; particularly the articles of iron, which wer rusted very much    my guns, tomehawks, & knives were
  • was opened and aired, we busily employed in this business all hands, from ten in the morning untill sun
  • September 17, 1803
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
September 1, 1803 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • as at this season.—    the Fog appears to owe it's orrigin to the difference of temperature between the air
  • by the summer's sun dose not undergo so rapid a change from the absence of the sun as the air dose
  • consiquently when the air becomes most cool which is about sunrise the fogg is thickest and appears
  • September 1, 1803
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
September 6, 1803 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • —    observed the Thermometer in the air to stand at 71° water 73°—    the fogg continued even with small
  • difference between temperature of the air and water    [s]truck on a riffle which we got over with some
  • September 6, 1803
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
September 16, 1803 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • : Thermometer this morning in the air 54° in the water 72°    a thick fogg which continued so thick that we did
  • September 16, 1803
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
September 4, 1803 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • in the open air to 68°    the fogg dispeared and we set out; the difference therefore of 5° in temperature
  • between the warter and air is not sufficient to produce the appearance of fogg—    from the watermark we
  • September 4, 1803
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
September 7, 1803 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • to get out.    observed the Thermometer at sun rise in the air to stand at 47° the tem[pe]rature
  • September 7, 1803
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
ca. April 1804 - Clark, William; Lewis, Meriwether; Unknown
  • ) ?]—Lo[aded] his gun to Shute S. O. [Sergeant Ordway (Ordway, John) ?] & Disobeyed Orders
  • , John) may have been the one who loaded his gun, since he was one of those tried on March 29. R. F
  • ca. April 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William; Lewis, Meriwether; Unknown
May 14, 1804 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • and air or at other times with a slow fire or smoke of the chimnies, it shrinks much in drying
  • dryed by the sun and air after being exposed to the frost is purforated with two circular ranges
  • May 14, 1804
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
November 16, 1803 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • which flew of[f] and having no gun with me did not persue it— This sentence
  • November 16, 1803
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
Weather, April 1804 - Clark, William; Lewis, Meriwether
  • and ap- pear above ground.    cold air
  • , Meriwether) detailed description of this bird on August 8, 1804. The note about cold air appears only
  • April 30, 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William; Lewis, Meriwether
August 8, 1804 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • and seems to be composes of globles of air and perfectly imbraces the part of the feather which extends
  • August 8, 1804
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
June 24, 1804 - Clark, William; Lewis, Meriwether
  • with mud, I went my Camp & [s]Craped off the Mud and washed my Clothes, and fired off my gun which
  • June 24, 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William; Lewis, Meriwether
November 22, 1803 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • , Nathaniel Hale) ] who went out to hunt this morning has not yet come up, had several guns fired to bring him
  • November 22, 1803
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
November 23, 1803 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • , Nathaniel Hale) , the man who was hunting yesterday has not yet arrived, had several guns fired again
  • November 23, 1803
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether