Wayuu Erotic

Homeland

La Guajira (Colombia and Venezuela)

Region

South America

About Wayuu People

The Wayuu are an Indigenous people of the La Guajira Peninsula, historically nomadic-pastoralist and matrilineal, with approximately 380,000 people in Colombia (primarily La Guajira Department) and approximately 415,000 in Venezuela (primarily Zulia State). The Wayuu cross-border population is the single largest Indigenous group in either country and one of the largest in northern South America. Wayuu society retains a distinct legal tradition (Sistema Normativo Wayuu, recognized by UNESCO as Intangible Cultural Heritage), distinct language (Wayuunaiki, of the Maipuran/Arawakan family), and matrilineal clan organization (sib system). Substantial Wayuu communities also live in major Colombian and Venezuelan cities through 20th-21st c. migration.

Typical Wayuu Phenotypes

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

Skin tone is Fitzpatrick III-IV with copper-bronze undertone characteristic of arid-zone Indigenous populations. Hair is uniformly straight (Andre Walker 1A-1B), black to very dark brown. Facial features include broader nasal bases, prominent cheekbones, full lips, and oval-to-rectangular face shapes; epicanthic-fold variants are common (estimated 40-60% in unmixed Wayuu populations). Stature is typical of arid-zone Indigenous American populations — adult males average around 158-162 cm and females around 148-152 cm. Wayuu populations show some genetic and phenotypic distinctness from Andean and Amazonian Indigenous groups, reflecting the distinct migration and adaptation history of the Maipuran/Arawakan lineage in the La Guajira ecological zone.

Discussion Board

Please log in to post a message.

No messages yet. Be the first to comment!