Journal of a Tour into the Interior of Missouri and Arkansaw | Page 8

Henry R. Schoolcraft
being joined by the hunter who accompanied us from the Fourche ? Courtois, and who parted with us on the lOth instant, in pursuit of a deer; but night has again over-taken us, and we are again disappointed, from which it is concluded that he has either been taken prisoner by the Osage Indians, or got lost in the woods. (This turned out to be the fact, as we learned upon our return. Having got into a district of wood where deer were plenty, and unwilling to lose the opportunity of killing them, although he wanted neither their flesh or skins, for he could carry neither with him, he fired at, and killed many, and pursued them a great distance from the spot where we parted, and he was unable afterwards to find his way back. He wandered about nearly a week in the woods in search of us, and at last accidently arrived at the saw mills on the Gasconade river, the only settlement in that region, from which he returned in safety to his house on the Fourche ? Courtois.)
Sunday, Nov. 15th
This morning, the sky being clear, and the weather pleasant, we left the cave, and resumed our journey toward the south-west. On quitting the cave, our design was to turn immediately from the valley of the creek, but we found the hills so precipitous, that we were compelled to pursue up the valley, in a north-west course, for a considerable distance, before an opportunity for leaving it presented.�� We now entered on a high, rough, and barren tract of country, consisting of a succession of ridges running nearly at right angles to the course we travelled, so that for the first six miles we were continually climbing up slowly to the tops of these lofty heights, or descending with cautious tread into the intervening gulfs-an exercise which we found equally hazardous and fatiguing. For this distance the soil was covered thinly with yellow pine, and shrubby oaks, and with so thick a growth of under-brush as to increase, very much, the labour of travelling. To this succeeded a high-land prairie, with little timber, or underbrush, and covered with grass. We found the travelling upon it very good, although it occasionally presented considerable elevation, and inequalities of surface, and we pursued our way with a pace accelerated by the reflection that we had emerged at last from the region of stony precipices and brambled valleys, through which we had been tearing our way, at the two-fold expense of great bodily fatigue, and such parts of our clothing as were not buckskin. In calling this a high- land prairie, I am to be understood as meaning a tract of high-land generally level, and with very little wood or shrubbery.�� It is a level woodless barren covered with wild grass, and resembling the natural meadows or prairies of the western country in appearance, but lacks their fertility, their wood, and their remarkable equality of surface. In travelling across such a district of country, we have found little to interest. There are no prominent features in the physiognomy of the country to catch the eye. There is no land-mark in perspective, to which, by travelling, we seem to approach. The unvaried aspect of the country produces satiety. We travelled diligently and silently. Now and then an oak stood in our path; sometimes a cluster of bushes crowned the summit of a sloping hill; the deer frequently bounded on before us; we sometimes disturbed the rabbit from its sheltering bush, or were suddenly startled by the flight of a brood of quails; but there was nothing else to interrupt the silence of our march, or, by exciting fresh interest, to lighten its fatigue. The mineralogy of the country was wholly uninteresting. Its geological character presented great uniformity, the rocks being secondary lime-stone overlaying sand-stone. In travelling twelve miles we came to the banks of a small stream, (the first running water seen since leaving the cave,) and encamped upon its banks, just as night closed around. Distance eighteen miles.
Monday, Nov. 16th
Nothing worthy of remark in the physical productions of the country has this day been met with. The face of the country, soil, trees, animals observed, and weather, have presented no character different from what was noticed yesterday.
We quit our encampment at early day-light, taking a due south-west course by the compass. In travelling five miles we came to a stream, running north-west, from which we conclude it is tributary to the Missouri. In fording it, I observed the bottom to be a grey compact of sand-stone, while its banks, in common with all the adjacent region, are secondary limestone. This sand-stone appears to be, in fact, the rock upon which the great secondary limestone formation of this country rests. It has
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