The Upper Tanana territory once extended from the
Donjek River into neighbouring
Alaska. The
Northern Tutchone territory included the lower
Stewart River and the area south of the
Yukon River on the
White and Donjek River drainages. Closely related through marriages between various local bands, these two language groups were merged by the Canadian government into a single White River Indian Band in the early 1950s for administrative convenience. In 1961, the Canadian government combined the White River Band with the
Southern Tutchone-speaking members of the Burwash Band at
Burwash on
Kluane Lake as the Kluane Band (subsequently the Kluane Tribal Brotherhood and then the Kluane Tribal Council). In 1990, the Kluane Tribal Council split its membership into the
Kluane First Nation, centered in Burwash, and the White River First Nation, centered in Beaver Creek. == Land claims ==