Alternate Timelines

Scenarios about 'north america'

North America is the third-largest continent, encompassing Canada, the United States, Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean islands. Its geography spans Arctic tundra to tropical rainforests, with its modern political boundaries shaped by indigenous civilizations, European colonization, independence movements, and territorial expansions. In alternate history scenarios, North America frequently features divergent colonial outcomes, different national borders, or alternative indigenous-European relations that reshape the continent's development.

What If Mexico Joined The United States?

Exploring the alternate timeline where Mexico became integrated into the United States, fundamentally reshaping North American geopolitics, culture, and economic development.

What If Newfoundland and Labrador Never Joined Canada?

Exploring the alternate timeline where Newfoundland and Labrador remained independent or chose a different path than confederation with Canada in 1949, potentially creating a distinct North Atlantic nation.

What If The American Revolution Never Happened?

Exploring the alternate timeline where the American colonies remained under British rule, fundamentally altering the development of modern democracy, global geopolitics, and the entire course of modern history.

What If The Confederacy Won The Civil War?

Exploring the alternate timeline where the Confederate States of America successfully achieved independence, fundamentally altering North American geopolitics and the global trajectory of democracy and human rights.

What If The Confederate States Won The American Civil War?

Exploring the alternate timeline where the Confederate States of America successfully secured independence, permanently dividing North America and fundamentally altering global politics and human rights.

What If Indigenous American Religious Practices Unified?

Exploring how pre-Columbian civilizations might have developed if a pan-American religious movement had emerged, potentially creating greater cultural cohesion across diverse indigenous societies.