| Lewis & Clark |
| CONTENTS |
| ILLUSTRATIONS |
| • | FIGURES |
| • | MAPS |
| [MAP] |
| Introduction |
| • | NOTES |
| 1. Contexts |
| 1. Living with Lewis & Clark |
| • | NOTES |
| 2. Wilderness Aesthetics |
| • | NOTES |
| 3. “Two dozes of barks and opium” |
| • | NOTES |
| 2. Legacies |
| 4. The Louisiana Purchase and the Lewis & Clark Expedition |
| • | NOTES |
| 5. “Twice-born” from the Waters |
| • | FRAMING THE LEWIS AND CLARK ENCOUNTER |
| • | DISEASE AND DEPENDENCE, 1837 TO 1886 |
| • | NEW WORLDS AND OLD WATERS, 1886 THROUGH THE 1940S |
| • | SURVIVING THE ENGINEERED FLOOD, 1953 TO THE 1980S |
| • | MAKING WORDS MATTER, 1984 TO 1992 |
| • | CLOSING THE CIRCLE |
| • | NOTES |
| 6. George Shannon and C. S. Rafinesque |
| • | NOTES |
| 3. Memories |
| 7. “We are not dealing entirely with the past” |
| • | NOTES |
| 8. Sacajawea, Meet Cogewea |
| • | NOTES |
| 9. On the Trail |
| • | NOTES |
| 4. New Perspectives |
| 10. Let's Play Lewis & Clark! |
| • | “FOR THE PURPOSES OF COMMERCE” |
| • | “TWO HUNDRED YEARS TO THE FUTURE” |
| • | MILLENNIAL HISTORY |
| • | MILLENNIAL NATURE |
| • | RE-CREATION AND RECREATION |
| • | PROBLEMS AND PROMISES |
| • | NOTES |
| 11. On the Tourist Trail with Lewis & Clark |
| • | PERSONAL DISCOVERIES |
| • | PATRIOTISM AND SUSTAINABLE HEROES |
| • | SACAGAWEA'S LEGACY AND WOMEN'S HISTORY |
| • | CLEAN CAMPSITES AND THE ABSENCE OF ARCHAEOLOGY |
| • | INTERPRETIVE CENTERS |
| • | NEW INTERPRETATION ON THE WASHINGTON COAST |
| • | SUPPORTING ROLES |
| • | INDIAN VOICES |
| • | CONTROVERSY AND THE DEATH OF CAPTAIN LEWIS |
| • | ENVIRONMENTAL IMPACTS |
| • | NOTES |
| 12. The Lewis & Clark Bicentennial |
| THE INFAMOUS BUSINESS TRIP |
| • | Wish-low-too-latin (Raymond Burke), Umatilla Tribal Chairman |
| • | NOTES |
| Epilogue “We proceeded on” |
| CONTRIBUTORS |
| INDEX |