Indigenous Costa Rican Erotic

Homeland

Costa Rica

Region

Central America

About Indigenous Costa Rican People

Indigenous Costa Ricans comprise approximately 2.4% of the Costa Rican population per the 2011 INEC census — approximately 104,000 across eight recognized peoples in eight territorial reserves. Major constituents include Bribri (Talamanca region of Limón and Puntarenas, ~17,000+; the largest Indigenous group in Costa Rica), Cabécar (Talamanca, ~16,000+; closely related to Bribri linguistically and culturally, both Chibchan family), Brunca/Boruca (southern Pacific zone, ~7,000+), Térraba (southern Puntarenas, ~700+), Maleku/Guatuso (Alajuela province, ~1,000+), Huetar (central highland, ~3,000+; with weak linguistic continuity), Chorotega (Guanacaste, ~10,000+; Mesoamerican-language-family connection to Pacific-Nicaraguan Chorotega), and the Ngäbe-Buglé (the Costa Rican portion of the cross-border Ngäbe-Buglé population that spans the Costa Rican-Panamanian border, with the much larger population in Panama).

Typical Indigenous Costa Rican Phenotypes

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

Skin tone is predominantly Fitzpatrick III-IV with copper-bronze undertone characteristic of Central American Chibchan-language Indigenous populations (Bribri, Cabécar, Brunca, Maleku, Ngäbe-Buglé) — with subtle phenotype distinctions from Mesoamerican-language-family Indigenous populations (Chorotega) detectable in genetic studies. 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 present at moderate frequency. Stature is typical of Indigenous American populations of the Central American interior.

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