~1200: Algonquian-speaking groups, including the Innu and Algonquin, inhabit boreal forest regions north of the St. Lawrence, primarily as semi-nomadic hunters and fishers.[1]
~1300: Inuit peoples expand into northern Québec (Nunavik), adapting to Arctic conditions and developing the Thule culture, ancestral to modern Inuit.[1]
15th century
~1400 -
Mi’kmaq Grand Council established; a governing body with male representatives and a grand chief leads by consensus.[2]
Blackfoot Confederacy emerges; a political structure organized around bands governed by consensus.[2]
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