Mestizo Peruvian Erotic

Homeland

Peru

Region

South America

About Mestizo Peruvian People

Mestizo Peruvians comprise approximately 60% of the Peruvian population and are the residual category combining people who self-identify as mixed Spanish and Indigenous (predominantly Quechua and Aymara) ancestry without claiming a specific Indigenous identity. The category is heavily concentrated in coastal cities (Lima, Trujillo, Arequipa, Chiclayo, Piura) and in Andean valleys where colonial Spanish settlement mixed extensively with the Inca-era Quechua-speaking population. Genome-wide studies (Sandoval et al. 2013, Harris et al. 2018) place average ancestry in coastal Mestizo populations at roughly 60-70% Indigenous American, 25-35% European, and 1-3% African, with substantially higher Indigenous proportions in highland Mestizo populations.

Typical Mestizo Peruvian Phenotypes

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

Skin tone spans Fitzpatrick II-IV with III the modal range, somewhat lighter on the coast and somewhat darker in highland and southern populations. Hair is predominantly dark brown to black with straight to wavy texture (Andre Walker 1A-2A). Facial features include moderate to wider nasal bases, full lips, and brown to dark-brown irises; epicanthic-fold variants are common at moderate frequency reflecting Andean Indigenous ancestry. Stature is on average shorter than the white-Peruvian norm, more similar to broader Andean populations. Within-region variance is substantial, with the coastal-highland-jungle gradient producing distinctly different modal phenotypes within the same self-identification category.

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