rivers, threatened to overwhelm travelers on the plains, and in later years derailed locomotives and cars, until railway engineers learned by experience the wisdom of stopping their trains whenever there were buffaloes crossing the track. On this feature of the buffalo's life history a few detailed observations may be of value.
Near the mouth of the White River, in south western Dakota, Lewis and Clark saw (in 1806) a herd of buffalo which caused them to make the following record in their journal:
These last animals [buffaloes) are now so numerous that from an eminence we discovered more than we had ever seen before at one time; and if it be not impossible to calculate the moving multitude, which darkened the whole plains, we are convinced that twenty thousand would be no exaggerated number."
When near the mouth of the Yellowstone, on their way down the Missouri, a previous record had been made of a meeting with other herds:
6. The buffalo now appear in vast numbers. A herd happened to be on their way across the river (the Missouri). Such was the multitude of these animals that although the river, including an island over which they passed, was a mile in length, the herd stretched as thick as they could swim completely from one side to the other, and the party was obliged to stop for an hour. They consoled themselves for the delay by killing four of the herd, and then proceeded till at the distance of 45 miles they halted on an island, below which two other herds of buffalo, as numerous as the first, soon after crossed the river."[1]
Perhaps the most vivid picture ever afforded of the former abun. dance of buffalo is that given by Col. R. I. Dodge in his "Plains of the Great West," p. 120, et seq. It is well worth reproducing entire:
"In May, 1871, I drove in a light vagon from Old Fort Zara to Fort Larned, on the Arkansas, 34 miles. At least 25 miles of this distance was through one immense herd, composed of countless smaller herds of buffalo then on their journey north. The road ran along the broad level 'bottom,' or valley, of the river. * * *
"The whole country appeared one great mass of buffalo, moving slowly to the north ward; and it was only when actually among them that it could be ascertained that the apparently solid mass was an agglomeration of innumerable small herds, of from fifty to two hundred animals, separated from the surrounding herds by greater or less space, but still separated. The herds in the valley sullenly got out of my way, aud, turning, stared stupidly at me, sometimes at only a few yards' distance. When I had reached a point where the hills were no longer more than a mile from the road, the buffalo on the hills, seeing an unusual object in their rear, turned, stared an instant, then started at full speed directly towards me, stampeding and bringing with them the
- ↑ Lewis and Clark's Exped., ii, p. 395.