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by Jongseong 4194 days ago
From the other side, Norse accounts describe often hostile encounters with natives, whom they called Skrælings. This term referred to the Greenland Inuits and the (probably Algonquian-speaking) Canadian Indians in Vinland. Intriguingly, some accounts might possibly also describe encounters with the Dorset people, who still maintained some presence in Northwestern Greenland for a few centuries after the Norse settled in Greenland. Of course, the Inuit also have oral traditions about the now-extinct Dorset people.

I don't know of any oral traditions about the Norse from Canadian Indians, though. Unlike the settlements in Greenland, L'Anse aux Meadows was just an exploration base that never developed into a permanent settlement. So unlike the prolonged periods of contact between the Norse and the Inuit, there might have been just a few isolated encounters between the Norse and the Canadian Indians that didn't leave enough of an impression to be preserved in oral tradition.