Indigenous Paraguayan Erotic

Homeland

Paraguay

Region

South America

About Indigenous Paraguayan People

Indigenous Paraguayans comprise approximately 2.0% of the population per the 2022 DGEEC Indigenous Census — about 140,000 people across 19 officially-recognized peoples in five language families: Tupi-Guaraní (Avá Guaraní, Mbyá Guaraní, Paĩ Tavyterã, Aché, Guaraní Ñandeva, Guaraní Occidental), Maskoyan (Enxet, Enlhet, Sanapaná, Toba-Maskoy, Angaité, Guaná), Mataco-Mataguayo (Nivaclé, Manjui, Maká), Zamuco (Ayoreo, Yvytoso/Ishir), and Guaicuruan (Toba-Qom). Concentrated in the Western (Chaco) Region — Boquerón, Presidente Hayes, Alto Paraguay departments — with smaller communities in the Eastern Region. The Aché and Ayoreo include groups that maintained voluntary isolation into the 20th c. (the last contacts of the Aché Northern band were in the 1970s, and small Ayoreo groups remain in voluntary isolation as of the 2020s).

Typical Indigenous Paraguayan Phenotypes

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

Skin tone spans Fitzpatrick III-V with IV the modal range, varying somewhat by ecological zone — Tupi-Guaraní populations of the Eastern Region are generally Fitzpatrick III-IV, while Chaco populations skew toward IV-V. Hair is uniformly straight (Andre Walker 1A-1B), uniformly black to very dark brown. Facial features include moderately broad nasal bases, prominent cheekbones, and full lips; epicanthic-fold variants are common. Stature varies — Aché average stature is among the shortest in South America (adult males around 152-156 cm), while Chaco Mataco-Mataguayo populations 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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