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gif The ExpeditionDiscovering Lewis & Clark from the Air
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106. Pompeys Pillar
108. Knobby Prairie
 

107. Montana Badlands

Yellowstone River near Terry, Montana
Terry Badlands Special Recreation Management Area
(view east, downstream)

Badlands

Badlands

n 30 July 1806 Clark and his party camped near the mouth of the War har sah, or Powder River, just to the right of the view in this photograph. The next day, eager to reunite with Lewis and his men, Clark's contingent covered, by his estimate, sixty-six miles. He remarked on the colors and shapes of the land — "barious Coloured earth," some of it red, much of it coal black, all of it "washed into Curious formed mounds & hills and...cut much with reveens." In too much of a hurry to climb up and look around, he saw only the ragged river edge of the dramatic Terry Badlands.

Around midday he passed the mouth of a tributary "40 yards wid Shallow and muddy," the banks of which can be faintly discerned near the horizon in the picture, and identified it as the stream the Mandan chief Sheheke had called Oak-tar-pon-er. Years later it came to be called O'Fallon Creek, reportedly after Clark's nephew, Benjamin O'Fallon, who served as a federal Indian agent until the 1820s.

On the north side of the river a center-pivot irrigation system defines the shape of a farmer's cultivated field.

From Discovering Lewis & Clark from the Air
Photography by Jim Wark
Text by Joseph Mussulman
Reproduced with the permission of
Mountain Press Publishing Company.

106. Pompeys Pillar
108. Knobby Prairie


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From Discovering Lewis & Clark ®, http://www.lewis-clark.org © 1998-2009 VIAs Inc.
© 2009 by The Lewis and Clark Fort Mandan Foundation, Washburn, North Dakota.
Journal excerpts are from The Journals of the Lewis and Clark Expedition, edited by Gary E. Moulton
13 vols. (Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1983–2001)