places
French explorer Jacques Cartier is credited with discovering and claiming Canada for France. He discovered and mapped the Gulf of Saint Lawrence and the Saint Lawrence River.
Jacques Cartier was a French explorer of Breton origin who claimed what is now Canada for France. Jacques Cartier discovered Prince Edward Island in 1534. He was the first explorer of the Gulf of St. Lawrence. Jacques Cartier built a fort at Stadacona, where Quebec City is now located. Further up the St. Lawrence, Cartier had Indian guides lead him to Hochelaga or Montreal. Jacques Cartier was the first explorer to chart the St. Lawrence River.
Because Jacques Cartier crossed the Sait Lawerence River.
Jacques Cartier explored France and the saint Lawrence river
Jaques Cartier Park
newfoundland...nova scotia....quebec
Jacques Cartier explored 3 different places but only was to find the Northwest Passage Way.His first voyage was to Newfoundland.On his secnd voyage was to the St.Laruence River.On Cartier last voyage he settled in Canada which he named and died there of old age.
Jacques Cartier explored 3 different places but only was to find the Northwest Passage Way.His first voyage was to Newfoundland.On his secnd voyage was to the St.Laruence River.On Cartier last voyage he settled in Canada which he named and died there of old age.
The problem was that Cartier lost 50 of his men and the native people taught him how to combat the disease by boiling and drinking the liquid.
Boats have helped us to discover unknown places on this planet through sea voyages
In 1534, King Francis I of France authorized Jacques Cartier, a navigator, to lead a voyage to the New World (presumabely North America) so that he could find gold and other treasures, as well as create a new route to Asia. Cartier lead three separate expeditions along the St. Lawrence River, eventually enabling France to claim the lands that would later become Canada (an example would be the Quebec province, which is inhabited by French and French-Canadian residents). In April of 1534, Cartier set sail with two ships and 61 men to the western coast of Newfoundland and the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and as far as present-day Anticosti Island, which Cartier called "Assomption." He had also captured two Native Americans from the Gaspe Peninsula. Moreover, he's credited with the discovery of what's now Prince Edward Island. The following year, in 1535, Cartier traveled back to the West with three ships and 110 men. I'm not sure the specifics of these explorations and if they're accurate, or if they're the exact places he traveled to. I'm also not sure if there were any other voyages to the east coast of Canada and/or America in which Cartier explored and established a population or base to camp out in.
many places