Why was there conflict between the European settlers and the Aboriginal peoples?
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Colonial Conflict Aboriginal groups and European settlers viewed land as a means of survival, but they had very different customs in how to use the land and its resources. Aboriginal custom respected land as sacred and integral to life itself.
What happened between the Europeans and the Indigenous?
The European newcomers destroyed their way of life. They harmed the environment by hunting and killing the entire population of bison, thus depleting the main food source for First Nations. First Nations have lost approximately 98% of their land and were forced to live in isolated reserves.
How did the Europeans affect the Aboriginal people?

The introduction of new diseases by the colonists had a devastating impact on Indigenous communities. The Europeans brought many diseases with them, including bronchitis, measles, scarlet fever, chicken pox, smallpox, and whooping cough.
What happened when the European settlers came to Canada?
European settlers brought weapons that the indigenous people living in Canada had never seen, especially guns. These new weapons allowed Europeans to win almost all of their conflicts with First Nations groups. Europeans also brought deadly diseases that killed huge numbers of First Nations people.

What kind of relationship was between the aboriginal peoples and the early settlers from Europe?
Indigenous people traded for European goods, established military alliances and hostilities, intermarried, sometimes converted to Christianity, and participated politically in the governance of New France.
How did the Europeans view aboriginals?
They might instead see Aboriginal people as without agriculture, and hence without any system of government, and living a so-called “primitive” life. This negative view of Indigenous people tended to be more common, but as Captain Cook’s writing shows, it was not the only way to see things.
What kind of relationship was between the Aboriginal peoples and the early settlers from Europe?
How did Europeans treat aboriginals?
Settlers often killed Aborigines who trespassed onto ‘their’ land. Many Aborigines moved to the towns to try and make a living. Here they suffered discrimination and disease, with alcoholism being a particular problem.
What were the immediate effects of European Colonisation on Aboriginal culture?
Colonisation severely disrupted Aboriginal society and economy—epidemic disease caused an immediate loss of life, and the occupation of land by settlers and the restriction of Aboriginal people to ‘reserves’ disrupted their ability to support themselves.
How did European colonialism create conflict between Canada’s regions?
What happened to the Aboriginal after European settlement?
After European settlers arrived in 1788, thousand of aborigines died from diseases; colonists systematically killed many others. At first contact, there were over 250,000 aborigines in Australia. The massacres ended in the 1920 leaving no more than 60,000.