I thought this was a pretty innovative way to carry ammunition. Especially when you live off elk for an entire winter in some of the rainiest parts of North America. This was how the Lewis and Clark expedition securely carried their ammunition.
The projectile raw material ( approx 8 lb. pure lead) forms a cylinder for approximately 4 lb. of powder. I am not sure of the powder to lead ratio, but supposedly it was correct for their weapons. The cylinder is then corked and sealed with beeswax. The men carried casting tools for processing their projectiles.
After 3 years of continuously living in the field off the land without resupply, and continuously hunting for their staple of meat, the corps of discovery still had an adequate supply of ammunition when they returned to civilization. The expedition carried 52 to 54 of these when they left, plus their personal loads.
I had never seen this before. Here are a couple of pics taken of the replica at the Fort Clatsop historical site:
The projectile raw material ( approx 8 lb. pure lead) forms a cylinder for approximately 4 lb. of powder. I am not sure of the powder to lead ratio, but supposedly it was correct for their weapons. The cylinder is then corked and sealed with beeswax. The men carried casting tools for processing their projectiles.
After 3 years of continuously living in the field off the land without resupply, and continuously hunting for their staple of meat, the corps of discovery still had an adequate supply of ammunition when they returned to civilization. The expedition carried 52 to 54 of these when they left, plus their personal loads.
I had never seen this before. Here are a couple of pics taken of the replica at the Fort Clatsop historical site: