Zebulon Pike. President Thomas Jefferson send Pike to explore the Upper Mississippi at the same time he sent Lewis and Clark to explore the Missouri.
the answer is out of Jacques cartier or jolliet or Radisson or Etienne Brule
He went to explore it in 1805 and just once he came back he got sent to another expedition in 1806. So he was on his exploration from 1805 to 1806.
It is not known who mapped the Louisiana territory. The Louisiana territory was established in 1805 and became the state of Louisiana in 1812.
In 1805 general James Wilkinson ordered Zebulon Pike to find the source of the Mississippi river. He then ordered he to a second expedition to explore and map the Red River, evaluate natural resources, and establish friendly relations with Native Americans. In 1810 Pikes journals were published as "The expeditions of Zebulon Montgomery Pike to Headwaters of the Mississippi River".
1805
The address of the Dockery Farms Foundation is: Po Box 1805, Cleveland, MS 38732-1805
That the columbia river.
It flows into the Mississippi River. In 1805, Lewis and Clark used the Missouri River to navigate further west into Missouri valley which was part of the Louisiana Purchase (1803). The Missouri River may be considered longer than the Mississippi if you include the rivers that are not actually named the Missouri but represent its main headwaters. The Missouri River drains a vast area of the north central US, from Montana, Wyoming, and the Dakotas, across Nebraska and Kansas to Missouri. It defines part of the state borders for 5 states.
He went to explore it in 1805 and just once he came back he got sent to another expedition in 1806. So he was on his exploration from 1805 to 1806.
Lewis and Clark explored parts of what is now Nevada in 1805. They were hunted at this time by people representing Spain because Nevada was in Spanish Territory. The Spaniards thought Lewis and Clark were encroaching on their land.
In spring 1805, they continued to the headwaters of the Missouri River, struggled across the Continental Divide at Lemhi Pass, and headed west along the Salmon, Clearwater, Snake, and Columbia Rivers to the Pacific. They landed at the mouth of the Columbia River, Astoria, Oregon on November 5 1805.
In spring 1805, they continued to the headwaters of the Missouri River, struggled across the Continental Divide at Lemhi Pass, and headed west along the Salmon, Clearwater, Snake, and Columbia Rivers to the Pacific. They landed at the mouth of the Columbia River, Astoria, Oregon on November 5 1805.