Amazonian Indigenous Bolivian Erotic

Homeland

Bolivia (Amazon basin and Chaco)

Region

South America

About Amazonian Indigenous Bolivian People

This umbrella entry covers Indigenous peoples of the Bolivian Amazon and Chaco lowlands — approximately 2.5% of the national population. Major constituents include Chiquitano (Santa Cruz, ~145,000), Mojeño (Beni, ~40,000), Movima (Beni), Tacana (La Paz Yungas and Beni), Ayoreo (Santa Cruz, Chaco), Yuracaré (Cochabamba lowlands), Esse Ejja, Cavineño, Chácobo, and many smaller groups. Concentrated in the lowland departments of Beni, Pando, parts of Santa Cruz, and the Chaco zones of Tarija and Chuquisaca. Distinct linguistically from highland Quechua and Aymara populations (these are Tupi-Guaraní, Macro-Jê, Tacanan, Pano, and other lowland-South-American language families) and historically less integrated with the colonial-Spanish administrative system.

Typical Amazonian Indigenous Bolivian Phenotypes

Reference for AI generation — hair, eyes, skin, facial structure, build

Skin tone spans Fitzpatrick III-V with IV the modal range, deeper than highland Quechua and Aymara populations. Hair is uniformly straight (Andre Walker 1A-1B), uniformly black to very dark brown. Facial features include moderately broad nasal bases, full lips, and prominent cheekbones; epicanthic-fold variants are common at moderate to high frequency. Stature is typically below the Bolivian national average — adult males average around 158-162 cm. Within-aggregate variance is high; specific groups should be referenced via dedicated atlas pages where available.

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