As we approach the bicentennial of the Lewis and Clark Expedition in
2004, attention will inevitably turn to the nineteenth-century explorers
who risked life and limb to interpret the natural history of the
American West. Beginning with Meriwether Lewis and his discovery of the
bitterroot, the goal of most explorers was not merely to find an
adequate route to the Pacific, but also to comment on the state of the
region's ecology and its suitability for agriculture, and, of course, to
collect plant specimens. In this book, Williams follows the trail of
over a dozen explorers who "botanized" the Rocky Mountains, and who, by
the end of the nineteenth century, became increasingly convinced that
the flora of the American West was distinctive. The sheer wonder of
discover, which is not lost on Williams or his subjects, was best
captured by botanist Edwin James in 1820 as he emerged above timberline
in Colorado to come upon "a region of astonishing beauty."