Lewis & Clark in Montana : Interpretive Sign Strategy 2000 Appendix Iv

Cover Lewis & Clark in Montana : Interpretive Sign Strategy 2000 Appendix Iv
Lewis & Clark in Montana : Interpretive Sign Strategy 2000 Appendix Iv
Montana.Governor's Lewis And Clark Bicentennial Commission
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THE COTTON TREE Cottonwood was an important resource for the native tribes of the northern plains, who devised many applications in addition to its obvious uses for fuel and shelter.
Narrow-leaf Cottonwood Plains Cottonwood 339 LEWIS E^CLA TW MONTANA APPENDIX IV THEME LOCATIONS Glimpse into tlie past What graphics and artwork are most effective in expressing your story?
Cottonwood bark and twigs provided nutritious food for liorses wlien grass was covered witPi snow.
Tlie sweet inner barl( and
...sap were relislied by tPie Flatlieads and Blacl(feet, wlio peeled the bark in spring when the sap was running.
When preparing for a horse raid, Blackfeet warriors would rub themselves with cottonwood sap to disquise their human scent.
Several tribes obtained a yellow dye from cottonwood buds.
Flatheads chewed cottonwood bark for colds, made poultices from its leaves for bruises and sores, and drank tea made from young branches and buds A VERY EXTRAORDINARY LODGE On the morning of July 13, 1805, Meriwether Lewis was walking along the banks of the Missouri south of the great falls when he came upon "a very extraordinary Indian lodge, or at least the fraim of one; it was formed of sixteen large cottonwood poles each about fifty feet long..." The detailed description that Lewis penned of this structure sounds exactly like the Medicine Lodge that many of the Plains tribes constructed for their ritual Sun Dances.


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