This section of the Timeline of Quebec history concerns events through 1533.
- ~10,000 BCE: Indigenous peoples begin settling in what is now Québec following glacial retreat, initially as nomadic hunter-gatherers.
- ~8,000 BCE: Early evidence of Paleo-Indians in southern Québec; these are the ancestors of later Eastern Woodlands peoples.
- ~3,000 BCE: Development of Archaic cultures in the St. Lawrence River Valley; increasing social complexity and use of regional trade networks.
- ~1,000 BCE: Woodland Period begins; Indigenous groups begin to practice horticulture (e.g., maize), create ceramics, and form complex societies.
- ~1000: Iroquoian-speaking peoples such as St. Lawrence Iroquoians are settled in large agricultural villages along the St. Lawrence River valley.
- ~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.
- ~1300: Inuit peoples expand into northern Québec (Nunavik), adapting to Arctic conditions and developing the Thule culture, ancestral to modern Inuit.
15th century
16th century
References
See also