Asked by j
he author of "The Corps of Discovery Expedition" concludes that the journals of Lewis and Clark help historians understand their hardships. Which details from the journals of Lewis and Clark BEST support this conclusion? Select TWO options.
"…braking with great force and fury against the rocks and trees on which we lie, as our Situation became Seriously dangerous…"
"…we took the advantage of a low tide and moved our Camp around a point a Short distance to a Small wet bottom at the mouth of a Small Creek…"
"O! how horriable is the day—This Storm Continued all day with equal violence accompanied with rain…"
"…we find the Indians easy ruled and kept in order by a Stricter indifference towards them…"
"…having made up our minds to remain until the 1st of April…it is true that we could even travel now on our return as far as the timbered country reaches…"
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
The first and third quotations.
- "…braking with great force and fury…our Situation became Seriously dangerous…" (describes physical danger)
- "O! how horriable is the day—This Storm Continued all day with equal violence accompanied with rain…" (describes severe weather)
Both directly convey the hardships faced by Lewis and Clark.
- "…braking with great force and fury…our Situation became Seriously dangerous…" (describes physical danger)
- "O! how horriable is the day—This Storm Continued all day with equal violence accompanied with rain…" (describes severe weather)
Both directly convey the hardships faced by Lewis and Clark.
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