The Chipewyan moved in small groups or bands, consisting of several extended families, alternating between winter and summer camps. The groups participated in hunting, trapping, fishing and gathering in Canada's
boreal forest and around the many lakes of their territory. Later, with the emerging
North American fur trade, they organized into several major regional groups in the vicinity of the European
trading posts to control, as middleman, the carrying trade in furs and the hunting of fur-bearing animals. The new social groupings also enabled the Chipewyan to dominate their
Dene neighbours and to better defend themselves against their rifle-armed
Cree enemies, who were advancing to the
Peace River and
Lake Athabasca. • ''Kaí-theli-ke-hot!ínne (K'aı́tëlı́ hót'ı̨ne)'' ('willow flat-country up they-dwell') lived on the western shore of Lake Athabasca at
Fort Chipewyan. Their tribal area extended northward to
Fort Smith on the
Slave River and south to
Fort McMurray on the
Athabasca River • ''Kés-ye-hot!ínne (K'ësyëhót'ı̨ne)'' ('aspen house they-dwell' or 'poplar house they-dwell') lived on the upper reaches of the
Churchill River, along the
Lac Île-à-la-Crosse,
Methye Portage,
Cold Lake, Heart Lake and Onion Lake. The tribal name is probably a description of adjacent Chipewyan groups for this major regional group and takes literally reference to the Lac Ile à la Crosse established European trading forts which were built with
Poplar or
Aspen wood. •
Hoteladi Hótthę̈nádé dëne ('northern people') lived north of the
Kés-ye-hot!ínne between
Cree Lake, west of
Reindeer Lake on the south and on the east shore of Lake Athabasca in the north. • ''Hâthél-hot!inne (Hátthëlót'ı̨ne)'' ('lowland they-dwell') lived in the
Reindeer Lake (ɂëtthën tué) region which drains south into the Churchill River. •
Etthen eldili dene (
Etthén heldélį Dené,
Ethen-eldeli - '
Caribou-Eaters') lived in the
taiga east of Lake Athabasca far east to
Hudson Bay, at Reindeer Lake,
Hatchet Lake,
Wollaston Lake and
Lac Brochet • ''Kkrest'ayle kke ottine'' ('dwellers among the quaking aspens' or 'trembling aspen people') lived in the boreal forests between
Great Slave Lake in the south and
Great Bear Lake in the north. •
Sayisi Dene (Saı́yısı́ dëne) (or
Saw-eessaw-dinneh - 'people of the east') traded at
Fort Chipewyan. Their hunting and tribal areas extended between
Lake Athabasca and Great Slave Lake, and along the Churchill River. • ''Gáne-kúnan-hot!ínne (Gąnı̨ kuę hót'ı̨ne)'' ('jack-pine home they-dwell') lived in the taiga east of Lake Athabasca and were particularly centred along the eastern
Fond-du-Lac area. • ''Des-nèdhè-kkè-nadè (Dësnëdhé k'e náradé dëne)
(Desnedekenade
, Desnedhé hoį́é nadé hot'įnę́'' - 'people along the great river') were also known as
Athabasca Chipewyan. They lived between Great Slave Lake and Lake Athabasca along the Slave River near
Fort Resolution (
Denı́nu Kų́ę́ • ''Tandzán-hot!ínne (Tálzą́hót'ı̨ne)'' ('dwellers at the dirty lake', also known as
Dení-nu-eke-tówe - 'moose island up lake-on') lived on the northern shore of
Great Slave Lake and along the
Yellowknife River, and before their expulsion by the
Tłı̨chǫ along the
Coppermine River. They were often regarded as a Chipewyan group, but form as "
Yellowknives" historically an independent First Nation and called themselves ''T'atsaot'ine (T'átsąnót'ı̨ne''). ==Governance==