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         Cartier Jacques New World Exploration:     more detail
  1. Jacques Cartier and the Exploration of Canada (Explorers of New Worlds) by Daniel E. Harmon, 2000-11

61. Famous Explorers And Resources About Columbus
cartier, jacques cartier Resources, Voyages of jacques cartier. Homeport, EuropeansExplore the new world, Lessons of the Explorers, Explore the world Virtually, Tons
http://www.suelebeau.com/explorers.htm
Famous Explorers
and Resources About Columbus
Websites compiled by Sue LeBeau Famous Explorers Columbus Links Famous Explorers Discoverers by the Alphabet Explorers of North America Henry the Navigator Giovanni Da Verrazzano ... Back to Top Just About Columbus 1492: An Ongoing Voyage Columbus and the Age of Discovery Chart Columbus' Voyage Christopher's Crossing ...
MS. LEBEAU'S HOMEPAGE

62. New World Explorers
Use the links below to research a new world explorer. jacques cartier. jacquescartier. cartier (student projects by Gander Academy). The Explorers.
http://www.nwoca.org/~ayr_www/rath/explorers.html
New World Explorers
Presentations
Power Point Directions: Use short phrases. Too many words is boring and hard to read. Use a large size and a simple font style. Words on the screen must be readable. Include a picture on each slide except for the title slide and the source slide. Pictures may be from clip art or the Internet, or they may be scanned. Make 8 to 10 slides for your presentation. Start with a title slide and end with a source slide. Check your spelling, punctuation, and capitalization. Print an outline view copy of your presentation in order to prepare your speech. Use the links below to research a New World explorer. Follow the links on those sites to additional information about your explorer.
Clip Art for Presentations
Discoverers' Web This is an alphabetical list of many sites for many different explorers. Click on the appropriate alphabet letter to locate your explorer.
Explorers of the Millenium This ThinkQuest Junior site has lots of links to lots of explorers. Check out the Hall of Fame and the Explorer Links to find out more information about your explorer.
John Cabot
Early Explorer Project (written by another 5th Grader) John Cabot (student projects by Gander Academy) The Mariners' Museum (John and Sebastian Cabot)
Samuel de Champlain
Champlain (student projects by Gander Academy) Historical Biographies Voyages 1607 The Explorers
Vasco Nunez de Balboa
Famous Hispanics (Vasco Nunez de Balboa) First European to See the Pacific Ocean
Jacques Cartier

63. History Of Nova Scotia, Bk1, Pt1, Ch3, Early European Explorers.
Tells of the time cartier spent in the region that would become Nova Scotia.Category Society History exploration Explorers cartier, jacques...... light of civilization to other persons of the world. Canadian provinces of Nova ScotiaNew Brunswick, Prince The Voyages of jacques cartier STUCK IN A FRAME
http://www.blupete.com/Hist/NovaScotiaBk1/Part1/Ch03.htm
Book #1: Acadia. TOC
TOC

Chapter 3 - "Early European Explorers" Norwegians though there be very little record of it visited the most northern parts of eastern North America; and did it, over a thousand years ago. Indeed, maybe before the Norwegians, the Irish paid a visit; or maybe, in classic times, the Greeks. However, what we do know, pretty well for sure, is that the Norsemen first came to Iceland, then as the decades and centuries unfolded they traveled beyond Iceland, to Greenland; and, then again, beyond Greenland to the shores of Baffin Island and Labrador; and then, swinging south, in their frail vessels, down they came along the upper coast of eastern North America. What ever motivated these northern Europeans to keep extending their northern voyages, and exactly when they might have made them, are further matters on which we are obliged to speculate. Was it for timber? Was it new lands for splintered clans? Whatever the extent of their explorations and the timing of them, it is believed that any settlements of the Norsemen were but of a temporary kind and that they made no great impact or contribution to the exploration of North America. Before we deal with such known explorers as Cabot and Cartier, we must acknowledge the thousands of seafaring men, who, in the process of making a living, came to the shores of America, especially those that are washed by the waters that flow over the great fishing banks of the northwestern Atlantic. Discovery, like everything else in life, is an evolutionary process and one voyage by one family was built upon the knowledge gained on a previous voyage of another family member; only slowly, did the Europeans become aware of their courses and their objectives that lie to the east over the ocean.

64. European_explorers
MAP. Paths of exploration of French British explorers to Canada. TIMELINE. MAP.cartier's routes to the new world and dates of voyages. BIOGRAPHY MAKER.
http://tos.scdsb.on.ca/sst6/european_explorers.htm
European Explorers Grade 6 Ontario Social Studies Curriculum General Vikings French ... Teach identify early explorers (e.g., Viking, French, English) who established settlements in Canada and explain the reasons for their exploration (e.g., fishing; fur trade, resulting in the establishment of the Hudson’s Bay Company); General Student Resources PASSAGES: A Treasure Trove of North American Exploration Search for explorers alphabetically or chronologically MAP Viking routes to the new world CAN PIX IMAGE BASE MAP TIMELINE A brief history of the "French Era" and "British Era" of the FUR TRADE MAP Cartier's routes to the new world and dates of voyages BIOGRAPHY MAKER How to write the story of someone's life MAP Cabot's routes to the new world and dates of voyages VIKING EXPLORERS Vikings: North Atlantic Saga (Smithsonian Museum of Natural History) L'ANSE AUX MEADOWS Vikings Discovery and Landing at L'Anse Aux Meadows ERICSSON Leif Ericsson L'Anse Aux Meadows Leif Erikson Discoveries Across the Atlantic ... Canada Hall: The Norse VIKING LIFE Gander Academy: Viking Life (links to info. about daily life, food, etc.)

65. Introduction - Pathfinders And Passageways
Or was it John Cabot or jacques cartier who first peoples were crucial participantsin the exploration of it of wonder on encountering strange new people, lands
http://www.nlc-bnc.ca/explorers/index-e.html
Introduction
Who discovered and explored the land we know as Canada? Was it the first inhabitants who entered North America over ten thousand years ago? Was it the Norse who established the first European settlement? Or was it John Cabot or Jacques Cartier who first claimed its shores for their respective nations? The answer is that the discovery and exploration of Canada was accomplished by many people and many nations, over thousands of years. Europeans rarely ventured anywhere in North America that First Nations and Inuit had not already been. Native people often acted as guides, informants, map-drawers, and even saviours to visitors who sought their help. It would be centuries before anyone understood the vastness of the continent, and Native peoples were crucial participants in the exploration of it. Since they left few records of their own, we know about them mostly from accounts written by others. The accounts written by explorers and visitors to the continent tend to describe the writer's sense of wonder on encountering strange new people, lands and animals. These accounts convey both respect and fear of the natural environment, and recount daring journeys and deaths from cold, hunger, and battle, as well as what the narrators knew of the adventurers who had come before them. Last Updated: 2001-12-07 Important Notices

66. Archive Main Page
Novus Orbis Images of the new world, 15071669 . htm ~ Hypertext Guide to the Explorationof the www.io.org/~socrates/cartier.html ~ jacques cartier; http//www
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Academy/6275/archives.html
House on Old Fort Island [National Archives of Canada ]
  • this is the first page in what will be a much larger archives section. Net sources for local information are listed on this page.
  • an map section has now been added. Click on "Archives Maps", to the left.
  • a set of archive images has been begun. It is presented with comments from our students.
Learn About Our Region

67. MODULE 1
settlement at Acadia _; jacques cartier's first trip to Columbus' voyage to theNew world _. cartier's Lawrence River _; cartier's exploration of the
http://www.qesnrecit.qc.ca/socialsciences/cycles45/history/classification/classa
HISTORY OF QUEBEC AND CANADA MODULE 1 THE FRENCH EMPIRE IN NORTH AMERICA (Classification and chronological activities)
CLASSIFY
THE DATA BELOW ACCORDING TO THE FOLLOWING THREE CATEGORIES : A) Occupation of the territory
  • reasons for explorations Cartier's voyages geographic conditions
B) The fur trade
  • concepts of colonization mercantilism territorial and military consequences
C) Amerindian civilizations
  • sociocultural organization of the Amerindians mutual influences
1. From the Indians the French learned how to use canoes, snowshoes, and toboggans to travel in the woods. 2. He travelled to Hochelaga and later that year he spent the winter at Stadacona. 3. New France was a sparsely populated trading colony. 4. The Algonquins obtained their food mainly by hunting, fishing, and gathering. 5. The French and English formed military alliances with certain native groups. 6. The extensive system of rivers and lakes favoured the exploration of the continent during the French regime. 7. Their homes consisted of birchbark tents called wigwams. 8. The Iroquois led a sedentary way of life.

68. Cartier-Brébeuf
Between 1534 and 1542, jacques cartier made three voyages to North scientific curiosity,brought forth not only a new conception of the world but also
http://www2.parkscanada.gc.ca/parks/quebec/brebeuf/en/histoire/histoire_1_e.html

69. Bibliography
Coulter, Tony. jacques cartier, Samuel de Champlain, and Explorers of Canada Da Gama,Vasco. Explorers of the new world. Estavanico. The world Book Multimedia
http://www.d23.org/sullivan/travis/Explorer Book/bibliography.htm

70. Explorers
Epic Voyages Uncovering the world. http//library.thinkquest.org/C004237/english/nond/balboa.html. (Back to top.). jacques cartier. Virtual Museum of new France.
http://mcgee.berlinschools.org/Library/socstudies/explorer.htm
You may use the links below to visit web sites which contain information about European explorers of the New World. (To see web pages for specific explorers, click here Columbia Grammar School Computer Lab. Learning Web: Explorers http://www.cgps.org/cgslab/explorers.htm The Conquistadors: The Fall of the Aztecs http://www.pbs.org/conquistadors/ The Discoverers Web by Andre Engels http://www.win.tue.nl/~engels/discovery/ European Voyages of Exploration: The 15 th and 16 th Centuries http://www.ucalgary.ca/applied_history/tutor/eurvoya/ Mariners’ Museum: Age of Exploration http://mariner.org/age/menu.html South Orange New York School District. Explorers of North America http://socsd.k12.ny.us/explorers.htmlxplorers of North America ThinkQuest Explorers’ Hall of Fame http://tqjunior.thinkquest.org/4034/hall_of_fame.html ThinkQuest Voyage of Exploration: Discovering New Horizons http://library.thinkquest.org/C001692/english/index.php3?subject=explorers Virtual Museum of New France http://www.vmnf.civilization.ca/explor/explcd_e.html

71. Canada Odyssey - Themes
today symbolizes Canada's place in the world and many Abraham in 1759, when Montcalmlost new France to the french dream From jacques cartier to the Battle of
http://www.ccbn-nbc.gc.ca/expo/english/thematiques.htm
The History of Canada Your exhibition visit will start with the European explorers whose travels led to the discovery and development of the Canada we know today. You'll learn about the first settlers, their encounter with the native peoples, and the commercial ties they developed with them. The Plains of Abraham, a founding influence on Canada You'll then learn how Quebec City's promontory played a key role in the progressive exploration of all of Canada. Known today as the Plains of Abraham, this battlefield changed the course of history and led to the meeting of French and British cultures in Canada. This founding site today symbolizes Canada's place in the world and many attributes of Canada itself, including the immensity of the land. The discoveries it led to are represented today in two emblems of national significance, the maple leaf and the beaver. An Immensely Rich Land This second part of the exhibition casts a completely different eye on the Plains of Abraham. More than the battle of 1759 pitting Wolfe against Montcalm, the Plains represent the wealth of our land.

72. From Revolution To Reconstruction: Outlines: American History (1994): Chapter On
account of his voyages to a new world. By 1529 the Atlantic coast past what is nownew York harbor A decade later, the Frenchman jacques cartier set sail with
http://odur.let.rug.nl/~usa/H/1994/ch1_p4.htm
FRtR Outlines American History (1994) Chapter One The First Europeans (4/12)
An Outline of American History (1994)
Chapter One
The First Europeans (4/12)
Previous Page Next Page The first Europeans to arrive in North America at least the first for whom there is solid evidence were Norse, traveling west from Greenland, where Erik the Red had founded a settlement around the year 985. In 1001 his son Leif is thought to have explored the northeast coast of what is now Canada and spent at least one winter there. While Norse sagas suggest that Viking sailors explored the Atlantic coast of North America down as far as the Bahamas, such claims remain unproven. In 1963, however, the ruins of some Norse houses dating from that era were discovered at L'Anse-aux-Meadows in northern Newfoundland, thus supporting at least some of the claims the Norse sagas make. In 1497, just five years after Christopher Columbus landed in the Caribbean looking for a western route to Asia, a Venetian sailor named John Cabot arrived in Newfoundland on a mission for the British king. Although fairly quickly forgotten, Cabot's journey was later to provide the basis for British claims to North America. It also opened the way to the rich fishing grounds off George's Banks, to which European fishermen, particularly the Portuguese, were soon making regular visits. Columbus, of course, never saw the mainland United States, but the first explorations of the continental United States were launched from the Spanish possessions that he helped establish. The first of these took place in 1513 when a group of men under Juan Ponce de Leon landed on the Florida coast near the present city of St. Augustine.

73. Loading L4U IPAC
WHEN THE world BEGAN (15000 BC to 1800 AD) EPISODES 1A five hundred years ago, ofa new kind of Includes the story of jacques cartier and Donnacona; and the
http://drc.sd62.bc.ca/DT000212.HTM
Loading L4U iPAC. If iPAC does not automatically load within 5 seconds
Click on the L4U 2000 Image

74. Explorers
in the world of exploration A summary. facts and information about jacques Cartierand his Hernando DeSoto The new world Historical background; important
http://www.saintmarksschool.org/public/library/webliographies/pages/explorer.htm
Explorers and Exploration
Saint Mark's School-5th Grade Discoverer's Web Great Explorers of the World and Their Expeditions American Explorers Page: An alphabetical listing of famous American Explorers, photographs, biographies available for some explorers - listed in alphabetical order Discoverers and Explorers: Important facts and information about Lewis and Clark, the Astorians, Pike and Long, Mountain Men, Fur Trading Companies, and Fremont Early Explorers: Photographs, important facts and information about Christopher Columbus, John Cabot, Giovanni da Verrazano, Henry Hudson, Cornelius Mey Early Explorers; Important information and facts about Leif Ericsson, Marco Polo, Sir francis Drake, Columbus. Amerigo Vespucci. James Cook, Francisco Vazquez de Coronado, Hernando Cortes Explorer: A website written by fifth grade students about world famous explorers; organized by time periods; explorers listed in alphabetical order Explorers : Biographic material and information on the voyages of famous explorers - explorers listed in alphabetical order Explorers of Mexico and the West: A website written by students for students with important facts and information about Coronado and Cortes Explorers of Northeastern America: A website written by students for students with important facts and information about Cabot, Cartier, Hudson, Leif Erikson, Verrazano

75. Stepone
the North Atlantic The Vikings, the Cabots, and jacques cartier Voyage to new YorkLothrop, Lee Shepard, 1991. The world's Great Explorers Hernando Cortes
http://www.ci.shrewsbury.ma.us/Sps/Schools/Central/Curriculum/ELEMENTARY/SOCIALS
Step Three Gathering Locate these books in your media center. Some might be helpful as you gather information. Explorers of Long Ago Explorers of the Twentieth Century Non-Fiction Books Explorers of Long Ago Individual Explorers
  • Coulter, Tony. J acques Cartier, Samuel de Champlain, and the Explorers of Canada . New York: Chelsea House Publishers, 1993. Weisman, Joanne B. Weisman and Deitch, Kenneth M. Christopher Columbus and the Great Voyage of Discovery . Lowell, Massachusetts: Discovery Enterprises, Ltd., 1990. Coulter, Tony. La Salle and the Explorers of the Mississippi . New York: Chelsea House Publishers, 1991. West, Delno C. and West, Jean M. Braving the North Atlantic: The Vikings, the Cabots, and Jacques Cartier Voyage to America . New York: Atheneum, 1996. Dodge, Stephen C. Christopher Columbus and the First Voyages to the New World . New York: Chelsea House Publishers, 1991. Whitman, Sylvia.

76. History Of Canada
Rediscovery and exploration In 1497 an Italian named wilds of an unexplored new worldhad been of Verrazano by dispatching an expedition under jacques cartier.
http://www.expressimmigration.com/infoCanada/history/europeans.html
Home Page Our Services Immigrating to Canada Info Canada ... Assessment Arrival of the Europeans Info Canada History of Canada The First People of North America
Europeans land in Canada
...
Towards the New Millenium

Europeans land in Canada
The earliest discovery of the New World was made by Norse seafarers known as Vikings. The vague accounts of their exploits are drawn from their sagas, epic stories in prose or verse handed down by word of mouth through many generations.
In AD 985 Norse seamen sailing from Iceland to Greenland were blown far westward off their course and sighted the coast of what must have been Labrador. The report of forested areas on the strange new coast encouraged further explorations by Norse colonists from Greenland, whose settlements lacked lumber. In AD 1000 Leif Ericson became the first European to land in North America (see Ericson). According to the sagas, this was the first of many Norse voyages to the eastern shores of the continent.
A colony was established in what the Vikings described as Vinland, identified in 1963 as being on the northernmost tip of Newfoundland. Recent investigations have cast doubt on the once-popular theory that the Vikings also penetrated Hudson Bay and reached the upper Great Lakes region by overland routes. Discoveries of "Norse" relics in that area have been exposed by scholars as hoaxes. The Greenland colony died out during the 14th and 15th centuries, and the Norse adventures in Canada must have come to an end well before that time.

77. ThinkQuest Library Of Entries
Saari, Peggy, and Baker, Daniel B. jacques cartier. Explorers Saari, Peggy, andBaker, Daniel B. jacques Marquette. Explorers new York Scholastic, 1993
http://library.thinkquest.org/J002678F/bibliography.htm
Welcome to the ThinkQuest Junior of Entries
The web site you have requested, Who Goes There: European Exploration of the New World , is one of over 4000 student created entries in our Library. Before using our Library, please be sure that you have read and agreed to our To learn more about ThinkQuest. You can browse other ThinkQuest Library Entries To proceed to Who Goes There: European Exploration of the New World click here Back to the Previous Page The Site you have Requested ...
Who Goes There: European Exploration of the New World
click here to view this site
A ThinkQuest Junior 2000 Entry
Click image for the Site Awards Received
  • Silver
Site Desciption Why did Europeans explore during the Age of Exploration in the 15th, 16th, and 17th centuries? Find out when you join our voyage of exploration along with famous Portuguese, Spanish, English, and French explorers. Hear them tell their stories through interviews, autobiographies, biographies, and journals. It's an exciting way to learn about famous explorers, very different from your social studies textbook.

78. American Timeline: European Exploration; Exploreres, Jacques Cartier

http://www.fcps.k12.va.us/OakViewES/harris/97-98/america/exploration/cartier.htm
Jacques Cartier Ryan D., Jeff S., Kevin Q., Doug K, Jason B. Ship by Johnny M., St. Lawrence River by Amanda J. Jacques Cartier was born on December 31, 1491 in St. Malo, France. He died on September 1, 1557 in St. Malo, France of old age. He had a gloomy and thoughtful personality. He was married to Maria Katherine des Granches in 1519. There is little known about Cartier's early life. He may have sailed in the early 1500s with a fishing fleet. He was an excellent fisherman. He studied navigation in Dieppe, a French navigation center. People believe he was with Giovanni Da Verrazzano, an Italian explorer. They went on a French voyage to the new world in the 1520s. In 1534, King Francis 1 sent Cartier to North America to search for gold. In 1535, he was sent on a second voyage to Canada. On all of Jacques Cartier's voyages, King Francis I supplied the ships, the men and everything else that Cartier needed. He expected to find a northwest route to China by water. He had two ships on his first voyage. On his second voyage, he had five ships and 500 men. Then, on his third and final voyage in 1541, he sailed to to St. Lawrence. His purpose on this third voyage was to establish a colony in Canada, but the mission was not successful. He settled in St. Malo and wrote an account of his expeditions that was published in 1545. Cartier left from St. Malo with two ships in April 1534. He started to sail northwest to China, but in 20 days, he saw Newfoundland. He sailed right between Newfoundland and the mainland, then he said southward through the Belle Isle Strait. Then, he went east of Newfoundland and entered the Gulf of St. Lawrence. On this voyage, he saw Prince Edward Island and the New Brunswick mainland, sailed to Chaluer Bay and he named it. He landed don the Gaspie Peninsula and crossed the Gaspie Peninsula. Much of French land in Canada was claimed by Cartier. He sailed again in 1535 under King Francis the first.

79. Today In History: June 9
village of SaintMalo, France, jacques cartier was an ventured to Canada again, butcartier's detailed observations and settlers who ventured to new France. .
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/today/jun09.html
The Library of Congress President of Princeton University
Woodrow Wilson,

circa 1913.
Portraits of the Presidents and First Ladies,1789-Present
While attending a recent Lincoln celebration I asked myself if Lincoln would have been as serviceable to the people of this country had he been a college man, and I was obliged to say to myself that he would not. The process to which the college man is subjected does not render him serviceable to the country as a whole. It is for this reason that I have dedicated every power in me to a democratic regeneration. The American college must become saturated in the same sympathies as the common people. The colleges of this country must be reconstructed from the top to the bottom. The American people will tolerate nothing that savors of exclusiveness. Woodrow Wilson, president of Princeton University;
"Address to Alumni," April 16, 1910 On June 9 Woodrow Wilson was unanimously elected president of Princeton University. In this position, Wilson exhibited both the idealistic integrity and the occasional lack of political acumen that marked his tenure as 28th president of the United States. After graduating from Princeton in 1879, Wilson studied law at the

80. Age Of Exploration
CDRom Resources Explorers of the new world Historyof the world 2.0 exploration CD. Reference books.
http://www.carr.lib.md.us/ccps/mes/intranet/explorers/explorers.html
Age of Exploration Grade Five
Manchester Elementary School
Introduction
Task Organizers Resources ... Evaluation
Introduction You have been learning about the Age of Exploration in which many European explorers sought trade routes, economic gain, adventure, national glory, and the "greater glory of God." Through studying famous explorers and researching their stories, you can trace their routes and discover what made this age of exploration possible and important. You can also learn more about the natural, human, and capital resources that stimulated these daring explorations. What was it like to explore the unknown? What was the goal of each voyage? Many explorers experienced numerous obstacles and hardships during their voyages. How frightening was it to leave charted seas and explore the unknown? What is know about the expeditions of each of our country's great explorers?
back to top

Task You are about to experience the life of one of history's great explorers. Before each explorer could begin their voyage they sought financial support of their country to guarantee that they would have supplies and crew that they would need to successfully meet their goal. Logically, once the voyage was completed, the citizens and investors who supported the trip were interested in learning about the details and success of their contributions. You will research the life, goals, voyage, hardships, and achievements of an explorer. As a result of your research, you will be able to present your experience to your countrymen. You will create a multimedia presentation using PowerPoint to explain your voyage and achievements following your group research about your explorer.

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