Indigenous Brazilian Erotic

Homeland

Brazil

Region

South America

About Indigenous Brazilian People

Indigenous Brazilians comprise approximately 0.8% of the population per the 2022 IBGE census — about 1.7 million people across approximately 305 distinct ethnic groups speaking around 274 languages. Major populations include Tupi-Guarani-speaking groups (Tupinambá, Guarani, Kaiowá), Macro-Jê speakers (Kayapó, Xavante), Yanomami (Roraima/Amazonas), Tikuna (Amazonas), Pataxó (Bahia), and many others. Concentrated principally in the Amazonian states (Amazonas, Roraima, Pará, Acre) and in scattered communities throughout the South-Central, Northeast, and South. Many Indigenous Brazilian peoples maintain distinct languages, social structures, agricultural traditions, and demarcated territorial homelands; others are more integrated with regional Brazilian society. This umbrella entry aggregates across the very heterogeneous Indigenous population for country-level phenotype reference; individual constituent ethnic groups are atlas-page-worthy in their own right.

Typical Indigenous Brazilian Phenotypes

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

Skin tone is predominantly Fitzpatrick III-IV with copper-bronze undertone characteristic of Indigenous American populations, varying somewhat by region (lighter in Southern Tupi-Guarani populations, deeper in some Amazonian peoples). Hair is uniformly straight (Andre Walker 1A-1B), black to very dark brown. Facial features include moderately broad nasal bases, prominent cheekbones, full lips with distinct vermillion border, and epicanthic-fold variants common across many groups (estimates vary by population, broadly 30-60% in unmixed groups). Stature is typically below the Brazilian national average — adult Indigenous Brazilian males average around 158-162 cm and females around 148-152 cm in the largest populations, though variance across the 305 ethnic groups is substantial. Within-population variance is moderate; this aggregate description should not be applied to any individual Indigenous community without consulting the specific group's atlas page where available.

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