134 The Colorado River 
on the world’s knowledge. They recorded little, and, so far as 
information was concerned, they might almost as well never 
have set foot in the wilderness. But the new man records 
everything: the wind, the cold, the clouds, the trees, the 
Kaibab Pai Ute Boys Playing a Game of Wolf and Deer. 
Photograph by J. K. Hillers, U. S. Colo. Riv. Exp. 
grass, the mice, the men, the worms, the birds, etc., to the end 
of his time and his ability. He is the real explorer, the ad¬ 
vance guard of those many expeditions which followed and 
whose labours form the fourth division of our subject. Fre¬ 
mont is the name, since that time called “Pathfinder,” though. 
