For years historians, archeologists and related scholars debated the identity of the Iroquoian cultural group in the St. Lawrence valley which
Jacques Cartier and his crew recorded encountering in 1535–36 at the villages of
Stadacona and
Hochelaga. An increasing amount of
archaeological evidence collected since the 1950s has settled some of the debate. Since the 1950s, anthropologists and some historians have used definitive linguistic and archaeological studies to reach consensus that the St. Lawrence Iroquoians were peoples distinct from nations of the
Iroquois Confederacy or the
Huron. Since the 1990s, they have concluded that there may have been as many as 25 tribes among the St. Lawrence Iroquoians, who numbered anywhere from 8,000 to 10,000 people. Before this, some scholars argued that the people were the ancestors or direct relations of historic Iroquoian groups in the greater region, such as the
Huron or
Mohawk,
Onondaga or
Oneida of the Five Nations of the
Haudenosaunee encountered by later
explorer Samuel de Champlain. Since the 18th century, several theories have been proposed for the identity of the St. Lawrence River peoples. The issue is important not only for historical understanding but because of Iroquois and other indigenous land claims. In 1998 James F. Pendergast, a Canadian archeologist, summarized the four major theories with an overview of evidence: • Huron-Mohawk Option: • : Several historians combined data from early French reports, vocabulary lists, and oral histories of accounts by Native tribes to theorize the early inhabitants were Iroquoian-speaking Huron or Mohawk, two tribes well known in later colonial history. There has not been sufficient documentation to support this conclusion according to 20th-century standards. In addition, archaeological finds and linguistic studies since the 1950s have discredited this theory. • Mohawk Identity Option: • : Based in part on material from the 18th century,
Mark Cleland Baker and
Lars Sweenburg developed a theory that the
Mohawk (in some cases, they also postulated Onondaga and Oneida) had migrated and settled in the St. Lawrence River valley before relocating to their historic territory of present-day New York. Pendergast says that attribution of Stadacona or Hochelaga as Mohawk, Onondaga or Oneida has not been supported by the archaeological data. • : "Since the 1950s a vast accumulation of archaeological material from Ontario, Quebec,
Vermont,
Pennsylvania and
New York State consistently has provided compelling evidence to demonstrate that neither the Mohawk, the Onondaga, nor the Oneida homelands originated in the St Lawrence Valley." • Laurentian Iroquoian and Laurentian Iroquois Identity: based on language studies, with material added since 1940; and • St. Lawrence Iroquoian and St. Lawrence Iroquois Identity: Since the 1950s, anthropologists, archaeologists, linguists and
ethnohistorians have combined
multidisciplinary research to conclude that "a wholly indigenous and discrete Iroquoian people were present in the St Lawrence Valley when Cartier arrived. The current
anthropological convention is to designate these people St Lawrence Iroquoians, all the while being aware that on-going archaeological research indicates that several discrete Iroquoian political entities were present in a number of widely dispersed geographical regions on the St Lawrence River axis." The St. Lawrence Iroquoians did share many cultural, historical, and linguistic aspects with other Iroquoian groups; for example, their
Laurentian languages were part of the Iroquoian family and aspects of culture and societal structure were similar. The St. Lawrence Iroquoians appear to have disappeared from the St. Lawrence valley some time prior to 1580. Champlain reported no evidence of Native habitation in the valley. By then the
Haudenosaunee used it as a hunting ground and avenue for war parties. As the historian Pendergast argues, the determination of identity for the St. Lawrence Iroquoians is important because, "our understanding of relations between Europeans and Iroquoians during the contact era throughout Iroquoia hinges largely upon the tribe or confederacy to which Stadacona and Hochelaga are attributed." ==Culture and subsistence==