White Argentine Erotic

Homeland

Argentina

Region

South America

About White Argentine People

White Argentines comprise approximately 83.5% of the population and constitute one of the most exclusively European-descended national populations in the Americas — the cumulative result of Spanish colonial settlement (16th-19th c.) and the very large 19th-early 20th c. immigration waves, primarily Italian (~50% of all immigrants, approximately 25 million Argentines today have Italian descent — the largest Italian diaspora outside Italy itself) and Spanish (~25%), plus smaller German, Welsh (Patagonia), Polish, Russian, Ukrainian, French, Portuguese, and Slavic immigration. Genome-wide studies (Avena et al. 2012) confirm average European ancestry around 78-80% nationally, with the highest European-ancestry concentrations in Buenos Aires, the Pampas region, and Patagonia. Substantial Italian-Argentine and Spanish-Argentine cultural identity (lunfardo, mate, tango, Argentine Spanish accent) is rooted in this immigration history.

Typical White Argentine Phenotypes

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

Skin tone is predominantly Fitzpatrick II-III with seasonal tanning, similar to Italian and Spanish source populations. Italian-Argentine and Northern-European-descended communities skew lighter; Iberian-descended populations skew slightly darker (II-III). Hair color spans dark brown, light brown, blonde, and red, with darker shades modal but lighter variants substantially more common than in other Latin American countries — reflecting the strong Northern Italian, German, Welsh, and Slavic immigration. Hair texture is predominantly straight to wavy (Andre Walker 1A-2B). Eye color is most often brown but with high frequencies of hazel, green, and blue variants — distinctly higher than the Latin American average. Facial features track Italic, Iberian, Germanic, and Slavic source populations. Build is on average taller than the broader Latin American average and similar to or slightly taller than Southern European norms.

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