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Fall, 2004
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Oregon Historical Quarterly

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      Virginia L. Butler is an Associate Professor of Anthropology at Portland State University. Her primary research interest is zooarchaeology, the study of animal remains from archaeological sites, which she draws on to examine the long-term relationship between people and fish, mainly in western North America and Oceania.

 
      Robert Carriker is the Alphonse and Geraldine Arnold Distinguished Professor of the College of Arts and Sciences at Gonzaga University in Spokane, Washington. He has directed eight National Endowment for the Humanities Summer Seminars for School Teachers on the Lewis and Clark Expedition.

 
      Clay S. Jenkinson is a humanities scholar in residence at Lewis & Clark College. He is the author of several books, including the recent A Vast and Open Plain: The Writings of the Lewis and Clark Expedition in North Dakota, 1804–1806. He is a North Dakotan who grew up near the Little Missouri River valley and the Dakota badlands. He is considered the nation's leading first-person interpreter of Thomas Jefferson and Meriwether Lewis.

 
      William L. Lang is Professor of History at Portland State University and was Director of the Center for Columbia River History from 1990 to 2003. His publications include Great River of the West (1999), edited with Rober Carriker, and two articles on Lewis and Clark, published in the Oregon Journal of English (2003) and Oregon Humanities (2004).

 
      Jim E. O'Connor is a geologist for the U.S. Geological Survey in Portland, Oregon.

 
      Mark Spence is the author of Dispossessing the Wilderness: Indian Removal and the Making of the National Parks and co-editor of Lewis and Clark: Legacies, Memories and New Perspectives. His essay in this issue derives from a new book he is working on entitled "Lewis and Clark and the Nature of Nation, 1803–2006."

 
      Terry N. Toedtemeier is curator of photography at the Portland Art Museum, a co-founder of the Blue Sky Photography Gallery in Portland, and a former teacher at Pacific Northwest College of Art. An accomplished photographer, he is also trained as a geologist. His photography of Northwest basalt formations has brought him a visual arts Master Fellowship from the Regional Arts and Culture Council in Portland, Oregon, and a Visual Arts Fellowship Award from the Flintridge Foundation in Pasadena, California.  


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