A post-mortem examination has identified the remains from the fatal Oneida fire on the Oneida Nation of the Thames.
As a result of the investigation, they have been identified as Kurt Justin Antone, 43, Keanu Antone, 7, Kenneth Antone, 4, Kance Antone, 3, and 3-month old Kyias Antone.
There currently is no cause and several agencies continue to investigate.
The house fire took place on Townline Road around 11 a.m. Dec. 14.
Once on the scene, emergency crews found the home engulfed in flames and five people were unaccounted for by personnel.
Oneida Nation of the Thames Chief Randall Phillips said after the blaze that the two-storey home was old and "basically kindling."
Last week, Indigenous Affairs Minister Carolyn Bennett said the federal government is determined to improve aboriginal housing.
Phillips told a news conference after the fire that the government had rejected a plea for money to upgrade 50 houses at the Oneida Nation of the Thames.
Bennett has said the federal government doesn't know how many indigenous people die in fires on reserves because it no longer collects such statistics.
The collection of fire data was stopped six years ago to ease the "reporting burden" on First Nations communities, the minister said in written responses to questions recently tabled in Parliament.
Earlier this year, a fire on northern Ontario's remote Pikangikum First Nation left nine people dead, including a five-month-old baby. Ontario Regional Chief Isadore Day blamed "Third World" living conditions for that tragedy.
An internal federal government obtained earlier this year by The Canadian Press found that First Nations residents were 10 times more likely to die in a house fire than people living off reserve. The 2011 report also said that the fire rates for First Nations were 2.4 times higher than for the rest of Canada.