Modern Exploration of the Lewis
and Clark Expedition
Consumer, Home, and Recreation
Originating Technology/NASA Contribution
One of the forces that propels scientific and cultural
advancement is exploration. The mission of NASA is to
pioneer the future of space exploration, scientific discovery,
and aeronautics research. Through this mission, NASA
leads the Nation in pushing the boundaries of exploration
and discovering new frontiers, and, as a secondary benefit,
pushing scientific and cultural advancement.
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The
Lewis and Clark Geosystem is an online collection
of private, state, local, and Federal data resources
associated with the geography of the Lewis and
Clark Expedition. |
Much as the early American frontiersmen charted new territory
and created the new independent American culture, NASA
is at the forefront of the continuation of this pioneering
spirit. It is not surprising, then, that NASA Administrator
Michael Griffin is fond of drawing the comparison between
the work done under his stewardship of the Space Program
and the expeditions of such trailblazers as Captain Meriwether
Lewis and Lieutenant William Clark and their Corps of
Discovery.
In an address to the 2005 graduating class of the Georgia
Institute of Technology, Griffin told the students of
a plan to use available atmospheric elements on Mars
to fuel rockets. He made this comparison: “The requirement
to live off the land will be crucial to our future in
space, just as it was to Lewis and Clark and the Corps
of Discovery as they made their way from St. Joseph,
Missouri, to the West Coast and back, from 1803 to 1806.”
Four months later, while addressing a group at the 22nd
National Space Symposium, a commercial space meeting
hosted annually by the Space
Foundation in Colorado Springs,
Colorado, Griffin went on to say, “I believe that the
benefits of exploration are, similarly, an emergent property
of our inquisitive human behavior. We can study the great
explorations of the past, and we can conclude that such
ventures did in fact benefit the societies which sponsored
them. But no society can reasonably predict that a given
venture will prove to be worth its cost. Sponsorship
of such a quest is always an act of faith, not an act
of science.
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The
Lewis and Clark Geosystem combines modern views
of the traversed landscape with historical aerial
photography, cartography, and other geographical
data resources and historical sources. |
“In this regard I enjoy recalling that, as expressed
in his instructions to the Lewis and Clark Expedition,
President Jefferson’s primary goals for that venture
concerned the expedition’s diplomatic mission to the
Indian nations, the establishment of the United States
as the sovereign power in the region, and the enhancement
of the fur trade. Particularly important to the latter
was the effort to find a route between the headwaters
of the eastward-flowing Missouri River and the westward-flowing
Columbia, thus (it was hoped) enabling a waterborne route
for the fur trade between the east and west coasts. Who,
today, believes that these purposes—though they were
accomplished—constitute the most significant results
to have come from the Lewis and Clark Expedition?”
It is not only the Administrator who is in awe of the
explorations of Lewis and Clark. Their story inspires
many. In a preflight interview with Dr. Kalpana Chawla,
mission specialist aboard STS-107, when asked what had
inspired her throughout her life, she answered, “Lewis
and Clark’s incredible journey across America to find
a route to water, if one existed. And, the perseverance
and incredible courage with which they carried it out.”
Just as Lewis and Clark faced the great unknown, harsh
conditions, and unexplored territories, which secured
their page in history among the world’s great explorers,
so too, have NASA’s astronauts and visionary scientists.
Through its endeavors, over 200 years later, NASA has
managed to contribute to modern recording and understanding
of Lewis and Clark’s historic expedition through a unique,
collaborative initiative with other government agencies,
academia, and private industry. NASA provided a wealth
of satellite imagery to help preserve and explain the
route taken by Lewis and Clark.
Partnership
The Lewis
and Clark Geosystem is an online collection
of private, state, local, and Federal data resources
associated with the geography of the Lewis and Clark
Expedition. Data were compiled from key partners including
NASA’s Stennis
Space Center, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the U.S. Geological
Survey (USGS), the University of Montana, the U.S. Department
of Agriculture Forest Service, and from a collection
of Lewis and Clark scholars. It combines modern views
of the landscape with historical aerial photography,
cartography, and other geographical data resources and
historical sources, including: The Journals of the Lewis
and Clark Expedition, the Academy of Natural Science’s
Lewis and Clark Herbarium, high-resolution copies of
the American Philosophical Society’s primary-source Lewis
and Clark Journals, The Library of Congress Lewis and
Clark cartography collection, as well as artifacts from
the Smithsonian Institution and other sources.
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The
Lewis and Clark Geosystem, managed by GCS Research,
is intended for educational and research purposes,
and its primary goal is to provide a Web-based
geospatial system wherein concepts of historical
landscape change can be explored on an interactive
map. |
The Stennis contribution to the Lewis and Clark Geosystem
consisted of providing access to a variety of different
satellite resources. Most notably, the system employs
comprehensive national land coverage from the Moderate
Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer, a key instrument
aboard NASA’s Terra and Aqua satellites. It also employs
imagery from the Advanced Thermal and Land Applications
Sensor remote sensing instrument flown on the Stennis
Lear jet to show select campsites along the Lewis and
Clark Trail, as well as Landsat 5 TM (Thematic Mapper)
data and the highly accurate Landsat 7 ETM+ (Enhanced
Thematic Mapper Plus) coverage of the trail.
Stennis also worked with a Lewis and Clark historian,
Dr. Robert Bergantino, and GCS
Research LLC, a geospatial
information technology firm based out of Missoula, Montana,
that currently has a Space Act Agreement with the NASA
center. GCS Research has done work as varied as producing
imagery for secure airport management to watermarking
of digital imagery and was the perfect fit for this historic
endeavor.
At this time, The Lewis and Clark Geosystem also serves
as a primary historical geospatial component of the Federal
geospatial One-Stop (GOS II) Portal that makes geospatial
information available to the public The geosystem was
included during the launch ceremony for the earlier GOS
I and was highlighted during the 2004 National Governors
Association Conference in Washington, D.C. Similarly,
Alex Philp, president of GCS Research, had the opportunity
to discuss the creation, formation, and historical geospatial
components of the Lewis and Clark Geosystem at the 2003
Geological Society of America Annual Conference in Seattle,
where he was invited to present at the distinguished
USGS-sponsored Pardee Symposium, hosted by Dr. Jim Tate,
Science Advisor to the U.S. Secretary of Interior.
Philp said of the project, “The Lewis and Clark geosystem
was born out of shared vision between NASA and GCS Research
regarding the significance of the Lewis and Clark geographical
odyssey and the modern parallels to continued planetary
exploration. Technically, the geosystem demonstrates
the ability to share and combine NASA’s rich geospatial
archives in distributed geospatial systems. Conceptually,
the Lewis and Clark Geosystem helps us understand landscape
change in terms of human exploration both in the present
and future.”
Product Outcome
The Lewis and Clark Geosystem, managed by GCS Research,
is intended for educational and research purposes, and
its primary goal is to provide a Web-based geospatial
system wherein concepts of historical landscape change
can be explored on an interactive map.
The geosystem provides multiscale and multitemporal examination
of the Lewis and Clark Trail’s geography. The purpose
is twofold. It provides a way to view historical landscape
change and a way to examine the networking of a variety
of geospatial data sources. Covering 200 years of change,
it presents a variety of spatial data—historical, ecological,
climatological—in a way that allows for examination of
historical landscape change as a result of anthropogenic
and non-anthropogenic effects. It also explores the deployment
and networking of a variety of geospatial Web services,
each of which provides unique geospatial data types of
interest to the study of the trail’s geography, representing
significant, cumulative advancements in geospatial information
technology.
Perhaps the most notable feature of the interactive map
is that the user can superimpose or hide a series of
layers over it to help users form analytical perspectives
of the various trail landscapes. Like transparent slides,
the layers cover the map and show a variety of different
features. Landmarks can be added and taken away. For
example, a user can select a slide that superimposes
markers showing the trail in different colors, each color
depicting a different leg of the expedition, or a layer
that shows all of the places the expedition camped.
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The
Lewis and Clark Geosystem provides multiscale and
multitemporal examination of the Lewis and Clark
Trail’s geography. |
The user can superimpose the state borders, or take them
off for authenticity and to have a more contextually
accurate view of the trip. The user can also choose whether
to show the borders of Canada and Mexico, or even the
Louisiana Purchase. There is even a feature on the map
that will highlight or hide bodies of water. In short,
the user can modify the map in a variety of ways according
to interest, course of study, and intended use.
The online map has a bevy of additional features and
capabilities that make navigation easy.
The user is able to zoom in or out and pan across the
map, bringing the view as close as needed to examine
details or as far out as needed to gain perspective.
Crossing the terrain on this geospatial map is as simple
as dragging the cursor, which is a far cry easier than
how the early pioneers crossed the land. In fact, the
expedition averaged 15 miles per day by land and 25 miles
per day by river, with the explorers carrying all of
their equipment and supplies. Now it only takes the modern
researcher a flick of the wrist to cross terrain on this
map.
Similarly, while the explorers had to set up their astrolabes
and compasses to calculate coordinates, users of the
Lewis and Clark Geosystem have it easier. By clicking
on the map, it will re-center on that point. This tool
gives the same results as the panning tool, except the
user just needs to click where he wants the map to re-center.
This feature can be used for an accurate coordinate calculation.
Unlike the original explorers, the computer-bound user
can measure any distance on the map in miles or even
feet, with just the drag of the mouse.
And, while the expedition cartographers would have to
unfold a table, unroll a sheet of paper, and dip quill
into ink to make a new map, the system has a tool that
rescales the map with a ratio set by the users and then
allows them to print the map. The early pioneers would
have appreciated the technology today just as much as
the people of today appreciate the exploration efforts
of the early pioneers.
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