Absolutely, and we've gone through this rather exhaustively with the Senate committee on aboriginal peoples. In terms of the north--and the map is in the Auditor General's chapter--it's the south end of the Mackenzie Valley, which is the Dehcho people and the Akaitcho people. A couple of the communities have decided that they may want to get a deal on their own outside the framework of their larger grouping.
Then in the Yukon, almost all of the first nations settled in the 1990s. There are three holdouts, I think it is, and they've just decided that.... And they overlap with the same people in the north part of British Columbia, south of the 60th parallel.
But in terms of the chapter we're talking about today, it's basically two groups: the Akaitcho and the Dehcho. They overlap, just so you get a sense of our world, with the Métis who live in the Northwest Territories, and there is a severe disagreement between the first nations groups and the Métis groups as to whose rights apply where.