Ecology College:
Lewis and Clark's journey,
then and now
by Bill Horine

Photo by Bill Horine
Sergeant Floyd's
Monument honors the only member of Lewis and Clark's crew to die
during the two-year trip. Located on a steep bluff in Sioux City,
the monument offers a good view of the Missouri River bottoms
and surrounding Loess Hills. The nearby Sergeant Floyd Welcome
Center contains indoor exhibits about the expedition.
Nearly 200 years ago, President Thomas Jefferson commissioned
Captain Meriwether Lewis and Captain William Clark to explore
the new Louisiana Purchase. The 45 men of the Voyage of Discovery
left St. Louis on May 14, 1804 in one large keel boat and two
pirogues.
After 64 days and some 570 miles up the Missouri River, the crew
reached what we now call Iowa. They traveled up the Missouri River
along Iowa's border for 37 days and approximately 300 river miles.
With the bicentennial of Lewis and Clark's epic journey approaching,
many Iowans and tourists will be retracing the route of the Voyage
of Discovery. By all means, make the trip, celebrate this amazing
journey-and do some exploring on your own as to how much we've
changed this land in just 200 years.
Changes
to the land
July 16th Monday
1804 (Clark):
an extensive prarie on the S.S.. This Prarie I call Ball
[bald] pated Prarie from a range of Ball Hills parrelel to the
river & at from 3 to 6 miles distant from it, and extends
as far up and Down as I Can see."
Like today's visitors to western Iowa, Lewis and Clark were struck
by the unique Loess Hills formation. That "bald-pated prarie"
is now recognized as the hills in the Waubonsie State Park in
extreme southwest Iowa. Today, however, those hills are covered
with a thick forest of oaks and other hardwoods. The forests are
lovely, but much of the natural prairie is gone-a victim of human
fire suppression.
Changes
to the river

Photo by Bill Horine
Though the Missouri
River along Iowa's border is completely channelized, you can see
a natural stretch north of Sioux City. Canoeists can put in below
the dam at Yankton, SD, and float to Ponca, NE--seeing pretty
much the same shoreline experienced by Lewis and Clark
12th August
Sunday 1804 (Clark):
Sent one man across where we took Dinner yesterday to Step
off the distance across Isthmus, he made it 974 yards, and the
bend around is 18¾ miles. [So they had traveled 18¾
river miles around a huge bend and gained less than a mile of
land.]
Today's Missouri River is very different from the river Lewis
and Clark explored. About 32% has been channelized (including
the entire Iowa portion), 35% of the river is impounded behind
dams and only 33% remains that Lewis and Clark might recognize
as the river they explored in 1804-1806.
In the 37 days that the Voyage of Discovery traveled along Iowa's
western border in 1804, they measured a little more than 310 river
miles-sometimes through circuitous loops like that described above.
By 1879 the river itself had cut off oxbows and shortened its
channel to 211 miles. Later, humans redefined the channel further
with wing dams, cutting across bends and eliminating sandbars
to aid barge traffic. Now at 182 river miles, Iowa's western border
is entirely channelized.
Changes
to native species
Photo
by Bill Horine
You can see replicas
of Lewis and Clark's keelboat, "Discovery," and one
of the two pirogues used by the expedition at Lewis and Clark
Park west of Onawa.
July the 30th
Monday 1804: (Clark)
.Captain Lewis and My Self walked in the Prarie on the top
of the Bluff and observed the most butifull prospects imagionable,
this Prarie is Covered with grass about 10 or 12 Inch high
.Jo.
Fields Killed a Brarow [badger]
this animale burrows in the
ground & feeds on Bugs and flesh principally the little Dogs
of the Prarie, also Something of Vegetable Kind
.Serjt. Floyd
verrry unwell a bad Cold &c.
July 31st Tuesday 1804, camp at Council Bluffs (Lewis &
Clark):
..the deer and bear begin to get scarce and
the Elk begin to appear
Car fish is verry Common and
easy taken in any part of this river. Some are nearly white perticilary
above the Platte River. sum are nearly white
.the Praries
Contain Cheres, Apple, Grapes, Currents, Rasp berry, Gooseberris,
Hastlenuts and a great variety of Plants and Flours not Common
to the U.S. What a field for a Botents [Botanist] and a natirless
[naturalist]
As the prairie disappeared from Iowa, so did many native plant
and animal species. Channelizing the river had further unintended
consequences. Many of the oxbows that channelizers formed by cutting
off the bends were proudly converted to parks and recreational
areas at the time. But channelization increased the river's current
to 5-7 miles per hour, as opposed to the 3-3½ miles per
hour in earlier times. The faster current scoured out the river
bottom as much as 7-10 feet below normal. The lower riverbed helped
drain those oxbows, reducing or eliminating their value for recreation
and wildlife habitat.
In less than 200 years since their "discovery", we've
changed the land, river, flora and fauna along western Iowa. We're
still discovering the consequences of those changes.
Bill
Horine is a freelance outdoor and travel writer, lecturer and
photographer from Nevada, Iowa. He won INHF's 1998 Hagie Heritage
Award.
Read more excerpts from the journal
of Lewis and Clark.
Want
to explore some more?
Several western Iowa
towns and cities will be celebrating the Lewis and Clark 200th
anniversary Voyage of Discovery.
Locations, dates and times of those celebrations:
Sioux City; Sergeant Floyd 1804 Living History Encampment at
the Sergeant Floyd River Museum and Welcome Center, August
17-18, 2002, August 16-17, 2003 and August 21-22, 2004. 1000 Larsen
Park Road, Sioux City, IA. 51104-4914.
(712) 279-0198. E-mail: scpm@sioux-city.org.
Website: www.sioux-city.org/museum.
Onawa; Lewis and Clark Festival, June 7-8-9, 2002.
(712) 423-1801.
Website: www.onawa.com.
Council Bluffs; Lewis and Clark White Catfish Living History
Weekend. Held the 4th weekend of July each year. (712) 366-4900
Location: Western Historic Trails Center, exit 1B off I-80/29
in Council Bluffs.
For more information, e-mail Cathy
Engstrom, Director of Communications, or call (515) 288-1846.
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