Afro-Mexican Erotic

Homeland

Mexico (Costa Chica, Veracruz)

Region

Central America

About Afro-Mexican People

Afro-Mexicans are Mexicans of substantial African descent, comprising approximately 2.0% of the national population per the 2020 INEGI census — the first census in which the category was officially enumerated as a self-identification option. Concentrated in the Costa Chica region (coastal Guerrero and Oaxaca) and parts of Veracruz, the community descends primarily from enslaved West and Central Africans brought to colonial Mexico between the 16th and early 19th centuries, with subsequent admixture with indigenous and European populations. Despite long historical presence, Afro-Mexicans gained federal constitutional recognition only in 2019, and their cultural visibility in Mexican national identity has historically been minimal compared to Indigenous and Mestizo framings.

Typical Afro-Mexican Phenotypes

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

Skin tone spans Fitzpatrick IV through VI, with substantial within-population variance reflecting the long history of admixture. Hair texture is most commonly Andre Walker types 3A through 4C — curly to coily — with hair color predominantly black or very dark brown. Facial features show high variability: some individuals present with features more characteristic of West African source populations (broader nasal bases, fuller lips), while others show more admixed features reflecting Indigenous and European ancestry. Build varies widely. Within-Costa-Chica communities show more pronounced African phenotype concentrations than urban Afro-Mexican populations in cities like Mexico City and Veracruz, where admixture is generally higher.

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