Links to More Information on the Lewis & Clark Trail in North Dakota
Links to Information from the State of North Dakota
The State Historical Society of North Dakota
Lewis and Clark in North Dakota
Sakakawea
History of Sakakawea Statue on State Capitol Grounds, Bismarck
Huff Indian Village State Historic Site
Double Ditch Indian Village State Historic Site
Molander Indian Village State Historic Site
Fort Clark State Historic Site
Fort Mandan Overlook State Historic Site
Fort Buford State Historic Site
North Dakota Tourism Department
Lewis and Clark Trail Events
North Dakota - Legendary
On-A-Slant Indian Village
North Dakota Heritage Center
Chief Looking's Village Overlook
Double Ditch Indian Village State Historic Site
Fort Clark State Historic Site
Garrison Dam
Reunion Bay Recreation Area
Three Tribes Museum - Mandan, Hidatsa, Arikara
Fort Buford State Historic Site
North Dakota Parks and Recreation Department
Fort Abraham Lincoln State Park
Cross Ranch Nature Preserve
Cross Ranch State Park
Lake Sakakawea State Park
Fort Stevenson State Park
Little Missouri State Park
Lewis and Clark State Park
Other Agencies
North Dakota Geological Survey
Lewis and Clark, Geology and North Dakota
The Missouri River
North Dakota's Badlands
North Dakota's Clinker
North Dakota's Mountainous Areas: The Killdeer Mountains and the Turtle Mountains
North Dakota's Petrified Wood
North Dakota Forest Service - Lewis & Clark Cottonwoods - pdf file
North Dakota State Water Commission
North Dakota Postcards - Pictures change, but usually include some of
the Missouri River
Other Links
Fort Mandan and the Lewis & Clark Interpretive Center
Lewis and Clark Trail Heritage Foundation
Lewis & Clark Bicentennial Commemoration Signature Events
Mandan-Hidatsa-Arikara Nation
Lewis and Clark Across Missouri - This website serves geographical
information and maps that are products of the Lewis an Clark Historic Landscape Project that has been conducted at the
Geographic Resources Center (GRC), Department of Geography, University of Missouri in partnership with the Missouri State
Archives.
Lewis and Clark's Specimens as sketched by Charles Willson Peale
Exploring the West from Monticello: A Perspective in Maps from Columbus to Lewis
and Clark
The Journals of Lewis and
Clark Online, edited by Dr. Gary E. Moulton
Educational Links
How to Use a Sextant
How a Sextant Works
Navigation by Sextant
From the U.S. Geological Survey
USGS Resources for Teaching About Lewis and Clark
Map Adventures
Exploring Maps
What Do Maps Show?
Water Science for Schools
From other Agencies
Lewis & Clark Mapping the West (Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History)
Natural Resources Found by the Corps
of Discovery
Grids and the Process of Map Making
Journal Maps
Life on the Lewis and Clark Trail
The Men of Corps of Discovery
Native Americans of the Lewis and Clark Trail
The Impact of the Expedition
The Intrusion of Strangers
The Trail Today
Why Make a Map?
Lewis and Clark Education Center (The University of Montana)
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