Canada's Historical Geography Flashcards

You may prefer our related Brainscape-certified flashcards:
1
Q

who were the first people to set foot in North America

A

The “old hunters”

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2
Q

corridor theory

A

estimated that an ice free corridor appeared about 13000 to 14000

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3
Q

The sea route theory

A

old world hunters reaching the interior of north america before the ice sheet began to melt, namely by island hopping alon the sea edge of the cordillera ice sheet.

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4
Q

define cultural regions

A

specific territories that aboriginal people occupied and modelled their behaviour to

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5
Q

how many languages were originally spoken (first peoples)

A

55 languages

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6
Q

how many people were estimated to be living in Canada at the time of first contact

A

500,000

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7
Q

By 1871 what was the indigenous population and why had it decreased

A

122,700 (roughly 123,000)

Loss of hunting grounds, diseases brought by colonizers and also conflicts (muuuurder)

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8
Q

how many first nations are scattered across Canada

A

approx 615

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9
Q

recount Paleo-Indians

A

paleo-indians known as clovis originally inhabited new mexico. estimated to have made contact with north america more than 11,000 years ago. They discovered paleo-indian designed spears in the prairies that were 11,500 old

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10
Q

when did John Cabot (first euro) land in Canada

A

1497 followed by Cartier and Forbisher

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11
Q

In 1953 Cartier encountered two indian tribes along where

A

Gaspe Coast

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12
Q

In 1957 Frobisher encountered an inuit ecampment along where

A

along the arctic coast of Baffin Island

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13
Q

what was the first permenent settlement in Canada during colonization

A

Quebec City 1608

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14
Q

The first large wave of british immigrants cconsisted who

A

refugees from The US, loyalists who supported Britain during the American war of independence (1783)
After defeating Britain they sought refuge in other branches of the british colonies. Most settled in Nova Scotia, but some in quebec and montreal

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15
Q

Which region became the boundary between US and Canada originally

A

St. Lawrence/ Great Lakes

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16
Q

What year was the british conquest of France

A

1759 which shifted the french speaking majority

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17
Q

When was confederation, which provinces were joined and why

A

1867, Upper and lower Canada (Quebec and Ontario) Nova scotia and New Brunswick. The english empire believed joining these provinces would prevent annexation by the US

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18
Q

How did each linguistic group see the Canadian vision

A

The french saw it as an equal founding of two peoples where England saw it as a collective of equal provinces under british dominance

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19
Q

How did the english justify their version of the Canadian vision

A

1) Nature of confederation meant all provinces were shared equally
2) British formed the majority of the populice and therefore dominated voting
3) saw themselves as the business leaders

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20
Q

In the early 20th century settlement of western Canada followed which 3 important events

A

Ottawa obtainiing land of the Hudson’s Bay Co in 1870

The Dominion Lands Act (short title for An Act Respecting the Public Lands of the Dominion) (the Act) was an 1872 Canadian law that aimed to encourage the settlement of the Canadian Prairies and to help prevent the area being claimed by the United States.

The completion of the Canadian pacific railway in 1885

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21
Q

Why did Ottawa encourage settlement in the early 20th century (English, Canadians and American’s becoming Homesteaders)

A

1) the threat of annexation would be illiminated

2) Grain economy would benefit the nation and create freight for the CPR

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22
Q

Clifford Sifton pitched which campaign to US and Britain to lure in immigration and what did it’s failure influence

A

“the last best west” which failed and guided them to inviting beyond the british colonies. Cliftin reahed out to central europe, scandinavia and Russia. Ukrainian land hungry peasants showed up along with german speaking immigrants

23
Q

between 1901-1921 the population went from 400,00 to

A

2 million

24
Q

Immigrants who didn’t stick to Homesteading nourished which booming industries

A

minning and logging

25
Q

When did Rupert’s land and North Western territory join canada

A

1870

26
Q

When did British Columbia and PEI join confederation

A

1871 and 1873

27
Q

Describe the doctrine of Manifest Destiny or Britain’s three projected advantages of unionizing it’s northern colonies

A
  1. Better chance of political survival against US
  2. Better environment for investment
  3. Reduction in expenses to defnd northern american colonies
28
Q

Why did the atlantic colonies lack interest in joining Canada

A

they were part of the british empire and thought joining a new country had little appeal

29
Q

when were the provinces of Alberta and saskatchewan created

A

1905

30
Q

when did Newfoundland complete canadian “set”

A

1949

31
Q

Who was the first prime minister

A

John. A. Macdonald

32
Q

What were the key concerns in Canada’s early years

A
  • The CPR and National Policy (which fuelled fuelled centralism)
  • Political representation in a large, uneven country
  • Quebec’s place in Canada
  • The place of indigenous peoples within Canada
  • Immigrants and cultural pluralism
33
Q

What were the four goals of the National Energy Program of oil producing provinces

A
  • increase national energy security
  • expand canadian private and public ownership of the oil industry
  • provide Ottawa with a larger share of oil revenues
  • maintain lower oil prices in Central Canada
34
Q

The federal government’s main goal is to balance what

A

Regional economic interest AND national economic interest

35
Q

Treaty indians were given the right to vote in what decade

A

1960’s

36
Q

The royal proclamation

A

in 1763, which identified a part of british territory (the appalachian mountains) as Indian Lands

37
Q

Haldimand Grant

A

1784, purpose was to reward the iroqouis who had served on the british side during the american revolution. Lord Haldiman (governor of Queb.) prohibited the leasing or sale of land to anyone but the gov. in the tract expending from the source of the Grand River in present day southwestern Ontario to the point where the river feeds into Lake earie

38
Q

The Indian Act

A

1876, isolating Indian tribes from the rest of Canada and stripping them of their authority to govern themselves. They based it on the premise that they couldnt manage themselves, Ottawa became their “guardian” until they were integrated (as defined by Ottawa) They were not given rights of citizens. (Only positive outcome was that their land could not be sold to private individuals unless aproved by Ottawa)

39
Q

which church was the first to appologize for residential schoolin

A

The anglican church in 2003, also offered $25 million

40
Q

When did Stephen Harper publically appologize for residential schools

A

2008

41
Q

which three groups are under the aboriginal umbrella

A

metis, indians, and inuit

42
Q

define Treaty Indians

A

status or aboriginal indians who are “proven” members of a band that signed a treaty and have therefore have legal right to live on a reserve and participate in band affairs.

43
Q

What is the “ethnical” difference between Metis and Inuits

A

Metis are euro and aboriginal decent and Inuit are located in the arctic

44
Q

what percentage of aborig. live on reserves

A

less than half

45
Q

how are Aboriginals identified

A

they are registered as what group they identify as during the census periods
theres the three branches of aboriginal along with over 55 languages spoken and many identify with the name of thei tribal group

46
Q

define indigenous right (applies to Indians and Inuit)

A

collective rights that stem from the occupation before contact

47
Q

Define treaty rights

A

Treaties set aside reserved rland held collectively by and for the benefit of the band and define other negotiated rights and benefits. (legally the crowned holds land in trust)

48
Q

Metis Rights

A

provided individual land rights, set aside 1.4 million acres (divided into 1.4 sections to accomodate Metis children) each head of family recieved 160 (could keep or sell) Land occupied before 1870 was private property.
this idea was pourly exicuted

49
Q

describe Modern vs historic treaties

A

Until 1970’s Canada recognized two forms of land rights
- reserve lands held by the canadian gov. for indians
-usufructuary right to Crown land (for hunting etc.) right to use without claim to land
Federal government could sell lands for development without compensating the aboriginal land users.

Modern treaties consist of Comprehensive Land claim agreements, when a group of aboriginals have not yet signed a treaty can demonstrate claim to land through past occupancy.

50
Q

Why did Britain encourage immigration

A

to offset french.

51
Q

Describe the resurgence of Quebec Nationalism through the quiet revolution

A
  • quiet revolution in early 1960’s (felt like just yesterday/ yeah yesterdays if you means the 60’s)
    this increased because of
    -ethnic nationalism
    -industrial force gaining strength and becoming a part of north american industrial world
    -removal of the church’s hold
    -the state’s aggressive role in the provinces affairs
52
Q

Describe separatism

A

grew out of quiet revolution

Sovereignty- association option rejected in both 1980 and 1995

53
Q

when was Quebecois recognized as a nation within Canada

A

2006