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Your search returned 48 results from all items Search Only Journals

May 17, 1805 - Gass, Patrick
  • Timber (Bratton's, Rattlesnake) Creek
  • Seven Blackfoot (Burnt Lodge, Rattlesnake) Creek
  • The second, their Burnt Lodge Creek (Seven Blackfoot (Burnt Lodge, Rattlesnake) Creek) , is now Seven Blackfoot Creek (Seven Blackfoot (Burnt Lodge, Rattlesnake) Creek) , Garfield County (Garfield County, Mont.) .
  • May 17, 1805
  • Journals
  • Gass, Patrick
May 17, 1805 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Seven Blackfoot (Burnt Lodge, Rattlesnake) Creek
  • Timber (Bratton's, Rattlesnake) Creek
  • Timber (Bratton's, Rattlesnake) Creek
  • May 17, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
October 17, 1804 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Rattlesnake Cliffs
  • On the Stard. shore, opposite to a high projecting Bluff; which from the great number of rattlesnakes found near it, we called the rattlesnake Bluff (Rattlesnake Cliffs) .
  • October 17, 1804
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
July 10, 1806 - Clark, William
  • Rattlesnake Cliffs
  • Rattlesnake (Track) Creek (Beaverhead County, Mont.)
  • Rattlesnake Cliffs
  • July 10, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
Lewis and Clark on the Great Plains Images
  • Western Rattlesnake Western rattlesnake (top and middle) and western hognose snake (bottom) Illustration by: Paul Johnsgard Source: Lewis and Clark on the Great Plains 2003 University of Nebraska Press with the Center for Great Plains Studies Permission to reproduce image required. http://www.nebraskapress.unl.edu/
  • N.D.
  • Images
August 15, 1805 - Gass, Patrick
  • Rattlesnake Cliffs
  • We went 15 miles and encamped on the South side. Rattlesnake Cliffs (Rattlesnake Cliffs) , so named by the captains, about ten miles southwest of Dillon (Dillon, Mont.) , Beaverhead County (Beaverhead County, Mont.) , Montana (Montana) , near Barretts Siding (Barretts Siding, Mont.)
  • August 15, 1805
  • Journals
  • Gass, Patrick
May 17, 1805 - Ordway, John
  • Seven Blackfoot (Burnt Lodge, Rattlesnake) Creek
  • Ordway (Ordway, John) probably means the party's Burnt Lodge Creek (Seven Blackfoot (Burnt Lodge, Rattlesnake) Creek) , now Seven Blackfoot Creek (Seven Blackfoot (Burnt Lodge, Rattlesnake) Creek) , Garfield County (Garfield County, Mont.) , Montana (Montana) (see Lewis's (Lewis, Meriwether) entry for this day).
  • May 17, 1805
  • Journals
  • Ordway, John
Part 3: Miscellany - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Rattlesnake Cliffs
  • .— 47  46  50.2 No. 42 At the Rattlesnake bluff (Rattlesnake Cliffs) —on Lard. side 44  —[48.1?]
  • Winter 1805-1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
May 17, 1805 - Clark, William
  • Seven Blackfoot (Burnt Lodge, Rattlesnake) Creek
  • Seven Blackfoot (Burnt Lodge, Rattlesnake) Creek
  • Seven Blackfoot Creek (Seven Blackfoot (Burnt Lodge, Rattlesnake) Creek) is flanked by coal-bearing deposits of the Fort Union Formation (Fort Union Formation) (Tullock Member (Tullock Member) ).
  • May 17, 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
August 10, 1805 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Rattlesnake Cliffs
  • Rattlesnake Cliffs
  • there is scarcely any timber on the river above the R. Snake Clifts (Rattlesnake Cliffs) , nor is there anything larger than willow brush in sight of these forks.   
  • August 10, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
August 15, 1805 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Rattlesnake Cliffs
  • Rattlesnake Cliffs
  • On the Lard. side of the Missouri (Missouri River) at the rattlesnake Clifts (Rattlesnake Cliffs) . Observed Meridian Altitude of ☉'s L.
  • August 15, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
July 4, 1806 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Rattlesnake Creek (Missoula County, Mont.)
  • The complicated linguistic matter is discussed at June 8, 1806. Rattlesnake Creek (Rattlesnake Creek (Missoula County, Mont.)) , Missoula County (Missoula County, Mont.) , Montana (Montana) ; shown as "15 yds. wide" on fig. 4.
  • July 4, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
May 17, 1805 - Whitehouse, Joseph
  • Seven Blackfoot (Burnt Lodge, Rattlesnake) Creek
  • .— In Garfield County (Garfield County, Mont.) , a little above the mouth of Seven Blackfoot Creek (Seven Blackfoot (Burnt Lodge, Rattlesnake) Creek) .
  • May 17, 1805
  • Journals
  • Whitehouse, Joseph
July 11, 1805 - Whitehouse, Joseph
  • .—    Captain Clarks (Clark, William) party cut down 2 large trees, and got them in readiness to dig out &ca—to make Canoes.— Rattlesnake incidents had apparently become so common that only Whitehouse (Whitehouse, Joseph) reports it. It was a prairie rattlesnake.
  • July 11, 1805
  • Journals
  • Whitehouse, Joseph
Lewis and Clark on the Great Plains A Natural History
  • Illustrations Bison Grizzly bear and black bear Elk Pronghorn Least tern Piping plover Buffaloberry Pasture sagewort Bighorn Black-tailed prairie dog Coyote Gray wolf Mule deer Richardson's ground squirrel White-tailed jackrabbit Common poorwill Golden eagle Sharp-tailed grouse Trumpeter swan Western meadowlark Whooping crane Bearberry Fringed sagebrush Indian tobacco Lanceleaf sage Large-flowered clammyweed Missouri milk-vetch Shadscale Silky wormwood Western juniper and lark sparrow Bushy-tailed woodrat Swift fox Thirteen-lined ground squirrel Greater sage-grouse Lewis's woodpecker McCown's longspur Western rattlesnake and western hognose snake Channel catfish, blue catfish, and cutthroat trout Mountain sucker and goldeye FIG.1.
  • McCown's longspur, adult male Drawing of McCown's longspur, adult male FIG. 37. Western rattlesnake (top and middle) and western hognose snake (bottom) Drawing of a western rattlesnake (top and middle) and western hognose snake (bottom) FIG. 38.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Paul A. Johnsgard
April 16, 1806 - Gass, Patrick
  • I was out hunting this morning, and killed a rattlesnake among the rocks. Some hunters that went out in the morning returned in the evening and had killed two deer, some ducks and four squirrels, three of a beautiful speckled kind, and as large as a common grey squirrel, but the tail not so bushy.
  • April 16, 1806
  • Journals
  • Gass, Patrick
August 14, 1806 - Clark, William
  • Rattlesnake Cliffs
  • Another item reads: "From the head of Jeffersons River (Jefferson River (North, Southwest Fork)) through Snake Mountain (Rattlesnake Cliffs) is North 12 miles thence to Wisdom river (Big Hole (Sensable, Wisdom) River) is N. 20° E." Assuming the "head of Jefferson river (Jefferson River (North, Southwest Fork)) " to be the forks of the Beaverhead (Beaverhead (Jefferson) River) in Beaverhead County (Beaverhead County, Mont.) , Montana (Montana) , "Snake Mountain (Rattlesnake Cliffs) " is probably the Rattlesnake Cliffs (Rattlesnake Cliffs) .
  • August 14, 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
August 14, 1805 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Rattlesnake (Track) Creek (Beaverhead County, Mont.)
  • Rattlesnake (Track) Creek (Beaverhead County, Mont.)
  • Rattlesnake Cliffs
  • August 14, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
August 4, 1806 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • during our halt we killed a very large rattlesnake of the speceis common to our country.    it had 176 scuta on the abdomen and 25 on the tail, it's length 5 feet.   
  • Atlas map 37; MRC map 65. Perhaps the prarie rattlesnake, Crotalus viridus viridus. Benson (HLCE), 90. The camp was in Valley (Valley County, Mont.)
  • August 4, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
July 26, 1805 - Gass, Patrick
  • At 4 o'clock we proceeded on through the valley; passed a creek on the south side, and having gone 18 miles and an half encamped on the same side, where a small mountain comes in to the river. Probably the prairie rattlesnake, Crotalus viridus viridus. The species was new to science but not to the party.
  • July 26, 1805
  • Journals
  • Gass, Patrick
March 11, 1806 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • The reptiles of this country are the rattlesnake garter snake and the common brown Lizzard. The season was so far advanced when we arrived on this side of the rocky mountain (Rocky Mountains) s that but few rattlesnakes were seen I did not remark one particularly myself, nor do I know whether they are of either of the four speceis found in the different parts of the United States, or of that species before mentioned peculiar to the upper parts of the Missouri (Missouri River) and it's branches.
  • March 11, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
August 8, 1805 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Rattlesnake Cliffs
  • It has been confused with the landmark Lewis (Lewis, Meriwether) named Rattlesnake Cliffs (Rattlesnake Cliffs) , farther upstream. See below, August 10, 1805.
  • August 8, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
July 3, 1806 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Rattlesnake Creek (Missoula County, Mont.)
  • The Continental Divide (Continental Divide) . Rattlesnake Creek (Rattlesnake Creek (Missoula County, Mont.)) , Missoula County (Missoula County, Mont.) .
  • July 3, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
August 4, 1806 - Ordway, John
  • or McCone County (McCone County, Mont.) , Montana (Montana) , about two miles above the camp of May 7, 1805. Perhaps the prairie rattlesnake.
  • August 4, 1806
  • Journals
  • Ordway, John
May 18, 1805 - Ordway, John
  • we came 19 miles to day and Camped in a Smooth bottom thinly covered with c. w. timber on the South Side. Prairie rattlesnake, Crotalus viridus viridus, described by Lewis (Lewis, Meriwether) on May 17.
  • May 18, 1805
  • Journals
  • Ordway, John
August 15, 1805 - Clark, William
  • Rattlesnake Cliffs
  • I call rattle Snake mountain (Rattlesnake Cliffs) .    not one tree on either Side to day Course Distance &c above Wisdom River (Big Hole (Sensable, Wisdom) River)     August 7th S 45° E      7 miles by water 3 miles by land to the mouth of a Creek 12 yds. wide on the Lard.
  • August 15, 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
September 7, 1804 - Clark, William
  • Cutright (LCPN), 79–80, 121; Cutright (OMPD). The rattlesnake is probably the prairie rattler, Crotalus viridis, while the squirrel used for comparison is the gray squirrel, Sciurus carolinensis.
  • September 7, 1804
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
June 15, 1805 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • when I awoke from my sleep today I found a large rattlesnake coiled on the leaning trunk of a tree under the shade of which I had been lying at the distance of about ten feet from him.
  • June 15, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
Lewis and Clark on the Great Plains A Natural History
  • Their specific identity is in some doubt, but this might be a reference to the common and geographically widespread painted turtle. Prairie (Western) Rattlesnake Crotalus viridis FIG. 37 Many encounters with rattlesnakes were reported by the expedition; one of the earliest that certainly involved the prairie rattlesnake occurred May 17, 1805, near the mouth of the Yellowstone River.
  • The western rattlesnake was not formally described and given a Latin name until 1818. FIG. 37. Western rattlesnake (top and middle) and western hognose snake (bottom) Drawing of a western rattlesnake (top and middle) and western hognose snake (bottom) Softshell Turtle Apalone sp.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Paul A. Johnsgard
August 16, 1805 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • Rattlesnake Cliffs
  • Clarks (Clark, William) detention and was even fearfull that he had found the river so difficult that he had halted below the Rattlesnake bluffs (Rattlesnake Cliffs) . I knew that if these people left me that they would immediately disperse and secrete themselves in the mountains where it would be impossible to find them or at least in vain to pursue them and that they would spread the allarm to all other bands within our reach & of course we should be disappointed in obtaining horses, which would vastly retard and increase the labour of our voyage and I feared might so discourage the men as to defeat the expedition altogether.   
  • August 16, 1805
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
April 25, 1806 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • saw many common lizzards, several rattlesnakes killed by the party, they are the same as those common to the U' States.   
  • Probably the same as the previous day's brown lizard, the western fence lizard. Northern Pacific rattlesnake, Crotalus viridus oreganus, another new species. Benson (HLCE), 90; Cutright (LCPN), 288, 427.
  • April 25, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
Fort Clatsop Part 1: Estimated Distances from Fort Mandan to the Pacific Coast - Clark, William
  • Timber (Bratton's, Rattlesnake) Creek
  • Seven Blackfoot (Burnt Lodge, Rattlesnake) Creek
  • Rattlesnake Cliffs
  • Winter 1805-1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
May 16, 1806 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • .—    I killed a snake near our camp, it is 3 feet 11 Inches in length, is much the colour of the rattlesnake common to the middle atlantic states, it has no poisonous teeth.   
  • May 16, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
Weather March 1805 - Clark, William; Lewis, Meriwether
  • visited by the Birn (Le Borgne (One Eye)) the great Chief of the Big bellies (Hidatsa Indians)   12th snow but slight disappeared to day   [18] collected Some herbs pla[n]ts in order to send by the boat. paticularly the root said to cure the bites of the mad dog and rattlesnake.—   19th But little snow not enough to cover the ground   [20] one of the men informed that the Menetares (Hidatsa Indians) have plenty of artichokes.—   21st some ducks seen to light in the river opposit the fort   [23] but little rain.   24th but little Snow.   25th a gang of swan return to day    the ice in the river has given way in many places and it is with some difficulty it can be passed—   26th the ice gave way in the river about 3 P.
  • Weather March 1805
  • Journals
  • Clark, William; Lewis, Meriwether
May 30, 1806 - Lewis, Meriwether
  • The reptiles which I have observed in this quarter are the Rattlesnake of the speceis discribed on the Missouri (Missouri River) , they are abundant in every part of the country and are the only poisonous snake which we have yet met with since we left St.
  • May 30, 1806
  • Journals
  • Lewis, Meriwether
Weather, July 1806 - Clark, William
  • Any of several species of Larus. Probably the prairie rattlesnake. The common, or American, crow, Corvus brachyrhynchos [AOU, 488].
  • Weather, July 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
Lewis and Clark on the Great Plains A Natural History
  • Among reptiles and fishes, the western rattlesnake, western hognose snake, cutthroat trout, blue catfish, channel catfish, goldeye, and mountain sucker are certain or likely to have been newly discovered species.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Paul A. Johnsgard
Part 1: Estimated Distances - Clark, William
  • Timber (Bratton's, Rattlesnake) Creek
  • Seven Blackfoot (Burnt Lodge, Rattlesnake) Creek
  • E 13   2090   "    Big Dry River (Big Dry Creek (Big Dry River))   400 S W 25   — "    Werners run (Duck (Werner's) Creek (Valley County, Mont.))     10 N E   9   — "    Pine Creek (Seventh Point Coulee (Pine Creek))     20 N E 36   2160   "    Gibsons River (Sutherland (Gibson's) Creek)     35 N E 17   2177   "    Brown Bear defeeted Creek (Snow (Brown Bear Defeated) Creek)     40 S W 12   — "    Brattens River (Timber (Bratton's, Rattlesnake) Creek)   100 N E 24   2213   "    Burnt Lodge Creek (Seven Blackfoot (Burnt Lodge, Rattlesnake) Creek)     50 S W   6     "    Wisers Creek (Fourchette (Weiser's) Creek)     40 N E 14   2233   "    Muscle Shell River (Musselshell (Mah-tush,-ah-zhah, Shell) River)   110 S W 37   2270   "    Growse Creck (Beauchamp (Grouse) Creek)     20 N E 30   — "    North Mountain Creek (Rock (North Mountain) Creek (Phillips County, Mont.))     30 N E 36   2336   "    South Mountain Creek (Armells (South Mountain) Creek (Fergus County, Mont.))     30 S W. 18   2354   "    Ibex Island (Grand (Ibex) Island)       15   — "    Goodriches Island (Dry (Goodrich's) Island (Mont.))         9   2378   "    Windsers Creek (Cow (Windsor's) Creek)     30 N E   7   2385   "    Elk rapid (Bird (Elk Fawn) Rapids) (Swift water)       15   2400   "    Thompsons Creek (Birch (Thompson's) Creek (Chouteau County, Mont.))     28 N E 27 ½ 2427 ½ "    Judieths River (Judith River)   100 S W 11 ½ 2439   "    Ash rapid (Swift water) (Deadman (Ash) Rapids)         4   — "    Slaughter River (Arrow Creek (Slaughter River))     40 S W. 11   2454   To the Stone wall Creek (Eagle (Stonewall) Creek) above those }   30 N E 26   2480   emence natural walls "    Maria's River (Marias River)   186 N E 41   2521   "    Snow River (Shonkin Creek (Snow River))     50 S W 19   — "    Shields River (Highwood (Strawberry) Creek (Shield's River))     35 S W 28   2568   "    the foot of the enterance of }   45 S W   7   2575   portage River (Belt (Portage) Creek) 5 Miles below the Great falls (Missouri River, Great Falls of the) Leaveing the Missouri (Missouri River) below the Falls (Missouri River, Great Falls of the) and passing by Land to the navagable waters of the Columbia River (Columbia River) Names of remarkable places   width of the rivers & Creeks Distance from one place to another Distance from the falls of Missouri (Missouri River, Great Falls of the) Distance from the Mississippi (Mississippi River)     yds.
  • Postexpedition 1806
  • Journals
  • Clark, William
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • As the pains grew more excruciating (Indian women don't always drop babies as easily as buffalo drop calves), either the midwife or Jessaume offered the suggestion that powdered rattles from a rattlesnake, swallowed with water, would hurry things along. Indeed? And how did one obtain rattlesnake rattles in the dead of winter?
  • They had collected enough objects to equip a small museum—sixty-seven specimens of soil, salts, and minerals; sixty examples of plants, including one supposed to be a sovereign remedy for the bites of rattlesnakes and rabid wolves; the hides of many animals, some stuffed and several unknown to Americans of the time; four live magpies, a live sharp-tailed grouse, and a live prairie dog, probably the one they had driven from its burrow farther downstream with kegs of water; a variety of embalmed insects; and many Indian curiosities.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
Lewis and Clark on the Great Plains A Natural History
  • Contents List of Maps List of Illustrations Preface Acknowledgments Historical Overview Kansas-Missouri and Nebraska-Iowa South Dakota and North Dakota Montana Lewis and Clark Sites of Biological and Historic Interest in the Central and Upper Missouri Valley References Maps Route of Lewis and Clark in Kansas and Missouri Route of Lewis and Clark in Nebraska and Iowa Route of Lewis and Clark in South Dakota Route of Lewis and Clark in North Dakota Route of Lewis and Clark in Eastern Montana Route of Lewis and Clark in Western Montana Illustrations Bison Grizzly bear and black bear Elk Pronghorn Least tern Piping plover Buffaloberry Pasture sagewort Bighorn Black-tailed prairie dog Coyote Gray wolf Mule deer Richardson's ground squirrel White-tailed jackrabbit Common poorwill Golden eagle Sharp-tailed grouse Trumpeter swan Western meadowlark Whooping crane Bearberry Fringed sagebrush Indian tobacco Lanceleaf sage Large-flowered clammyweed Missouri milk-vetch Shadscale Silky wormwood Western juniper and lark sparrow Bushy-tailed woodrat Swift fox Thirteen-lined ground squirrel Greater sage-grouse Lewis's woodpecker McCown's longspur Western rattlesnake and western hognose snake Channel catfish, blue catfish, and cutthroat trout Mountain sucker and goldeye Preface The purpose of this book is to identify and describe the Great Plains animals and plants that were encountered and described by Lewis and Clark and their Corps of Discovery two centuries ago during their famous exploratory expedition of the Louisiana Purchase territories.
  • Among reptiles and fishes, the western rattlesnake, western hognose snake, cutthroat trout, blue catfish, channel catfish, goldeye, and mountain sucker are certain or likely to have been newly discovered species.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Paul A. Johnsgard
The Journals of Lewis and Clark: Almost Home
  • But I wish I could explain how we ever came up with an entry like "Bird, black" for "Blackbirds" or "Snake, rattle" for "Rattlesnakes." At least we never had an entry, "Fish, cat." But what about indexing subjects, themes, ideas, and concepts?
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • Gary E. Moulton
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • He had given Lewis a plant reputedly useful as an antidote to the bites of rattlesnakes and rabid wolves—a specimen so curious that Lewis had sent it to Jefferson, with a special note, when the keelboat went back down the river in April 1805.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • Pages of his journals dealing with the Great Falls area are devoted to berries, trout, handsome yellow-fronted meadowlarks, enormous flocks of fledgling blackbirds just learning to fly, thirteen-striped ground squirrels, Rocky Mountain pack rats, prairie rattlesnakes, and the shy, small, lovely Swift foxes that lived in underground colonies like prairie dogs and are now thought to be extinct in Montana.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
The Way to the Western Sea Lewis and Clark across the Continent
  • Walking briskly, they passed Beaverhead Rock and the Rattlesnake Cliffs, named for the great number of rattlers in the vicinity.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • David Lavender
Lewis & Clark among the Indians 6. Across the Divide
  • On the following day the explorers "fel in with a plain Indian road" which took them past Rattlesnake Cliffs to a fork in the Beaverhead River. Because the path also forked and Lewis did not want to waste time on the wrong trail, he dispatched Drouillard up one way while Shields took the other.
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • James P. Ronda
  • N.D.
  • Texts
  • James P. Ronda