Air Inuit provides scheduled flights to more than 20 destinations in Quebec.
Akulivik is situated on a peninsula reaching well out into Hudson's Bay. Its surrounding coastline resembles a kakivak, the traditional, trident-like spear used for fishing.
Aupaluk is the smallest community in Nunavik, located on the southern shore of Hopes Advance Bay, an inlet on the western shore of the much larger Ungava Bay.
Akulivik is situated on a peninsula reaching well out into Hudson’s Bay. Its surrounding coastline resembles a kakivak, the traditional, trident-like spear used for fishing.
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Located on the northern bank of the Innuksuak River, Inukjuak is known for its turquoise waters and brisk rapids.
Ivujivik is Quebec's northernmost village, surrounded by cliffs that plunge deep into the turbulent waters of Digges Sound.
Kangiqsualujjuaq is the most eastern village of Nunavik, situated 25 km from Ungava Bay in a cove on the George River.
The community of Kangigsujuaq is located in an area of awe-inspiring beauty, nestled in the hollow of a magnificent valley surrounded by towering mountains, just 10 km from the Hudson Strait.
Kangirsuk is located on the northern shore of the Payne River, a brief distance inland from the Ungava Bay.
Kuujjuaq is Nunavik's largest community, located on the west shore of the Koksoak River, about 50 km upstream from Ungava Bay.
Kuujjuaraapik lies nestled along the golden sand dunes at the mouth of the Great Whale River.
La Grande River, also called Chisasibi by the Cree population, is the 2nd largest river in Quebec.
Akulivik is situated on a peninsula reaching well out into Hudson’s Bay. Its surrounding coastline resembles a kakivak, the traditional, trident-like spear used for fishing.
Situated on the eastern coast of Hudson Bay, the name Puvirnituq derives from the Inuit words meaning "where it smells of rotten meat."
The village of Quaqtaq is located on the eastern shore of Diana Bay on a peninsula reaching into the Hudson Strait at the point where it meets Ungava Bay. Mountains stand to the north; to the southeast are smaller, rocky hills.
As its very name implies, Québec City is the spiritual heart of the province. Still referred to as the national capital by Francophones, the city is a monument to the history and culture of all Quebecers and is among the oldest cities in North America.
The community of Salluit is located at the far end of the narrow Sugluk Inlet, 10 km inland from the Hudson Strait. Since Salluit is more or less at the centre of many other communities, it often serves as a strategic location for meetings between people of the Hudson and Ungava coasts.
Located in the heart of Hudson Bay in the Belcher Islands, approximately 150 km off the coast, Sanikiluaq is the southernmost settlement in Nunavut.
Schefferville was established by the Iron Ore Company of Canada in 1954 to access the rich iron ore deposits in the area.
Because the Saint-Lawrence River flows in a roughly north-easterly direction, the southern cities of Montreal, the provincial capital of Quebec City and Sept-Îles, all lining the north shore, provide the best access to all 14 communities of Nunavik.
Tasiujaq was built on the shores of Leaf Lake, at the mouth of Deep Harbour on the Finger River. It lies a few kilometres north of the tree line, where shrub tundra relinquishes its hold to the arctic variety.
Umiujaq was established at the foot of a hill that resembles an overturned umiaq (the traditional Inuit walrus-skin boat). Located 15 km east of the community is the great Richmond Gulf, a large triangular-shaped inland bay linked to Hudson Bay by a rocky, glacier-polished gulch that resembles a canyon.
For most of the period between 1967 and 2007, Wabush was a very small community on the western tip of Labrador, best known for the mining and export of iron ore.