Some scholars have questioned whether de Noyon…
1689 CE
Some scholars have questioned whether de Noyon did in fact made it as far as Lake of the Woods.
De Noyon returns the following summer to Lake Superior, perhaps along what is now the United States-Canada border and includes Quetico Provincial Park, the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness, La Verendrye Provincial Park, and Grand Portage National Monument.
English-French animosity will prevent Europeans from returning to the area west of Lake Superior for a number of years.
La Vérendrye will revisit this Boundary Waters region in the 1730s, perhaps with assistance from the knowledge gained by de Noyon's travels.
The region is to become an important part of the North American Fur Trade, connecting the Great Lakes to the far northwestern interior of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and beyond.