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Nitassinan

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Nitassinan ( Innu : ᓂᑕᔅᓯᓇᓐ ) is the ancestral homeland of the Innu , an indigenous people of Eastern Quebec and Labrador , Canada. Nitassinan means "our land" in the Innu language . The territory covers the eastern portion of the Labrador peninsula .

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6-689: The area was known as Markland in Greenlandic Norse , and its inhabitants were known as the Skræling . This Quebec location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This Labrador location article is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . This article relating to the Indigenous peoples of North America is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Markland Markland ( Old Norse pronunciation: [ˈmɑrkˌlɑnd] )

12-471: Is the name given to one of three lands on North America's Atlantic shore discovered by Leif Eriksson around 1000 AD. It was located south of Helluland and north of Vinland . Although it was never recorded to be settled by Norsemen , there were probably a number of later expeditions from Greenland to gather timber. A 1347 Icelandic document records that a ship went off course and ended up in Iceland in

18-624: The Greenlanders also tells of 160 men and women who settled in Markland for winter protection led by Thorfinn Karlsefni ( Þorfinnr Karlsefni Þórðarson ), c. 1010. The Saga of Erik the Red indicates that Markland is south of Helluland, north of Vinland off Kjalarnes , northwest of an island called Bjarney, and with a country that Karlsefni thinks may be Hvítramannaland somewhere opposite its coast. The only known mention of Markland in

24-601: The process of returning from Markland, without further specifying where Markland was. Markland has been suggested to have been part of the Labrador coast in Canada, as Labrador lies in the heavily forested taiga region of the Northern Hemisphere north of the location of Vinland on the island of Newfoundland . The area of Cape Porcupine has been suggested as a possible candidate for the site. The climate and

30-568: The route that was first described by Bjarni Herjólfsson . The first land that Eriksson went to was covered with flat rocks ( Old Norse : hella ) and so he called it Helluland ("Land of the Flat Stones)". Next, Eriksson came to a land that was flat and wooded, with white sandy beaches, which he called Markland ("Forest Land"). Eriksson's crew cut down trees and took them to Greenland because Greenland has only one small forest and normally relies on driftwood or imports for lumber. The Saga of

36-644: The vegetation in this region may have changed significantly since the sagas were conceived, owing to the Medieval Warm Period and Little Ice Age . The particular part of the Labrador coast is difficult to pinpoint, as Helluland has been placed everywhere from Baffin Island to the northern Labrador coast beyond Groswater Bay to the southern Labrador Coast. The Saga of the Greenlanders tells that Leif Eriksson set out in 1002 or 1003 to follow

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