Mestizo Salvadoran Erotic

Homeland

El Salvador

Region

Central America

About Mestizo Salvadoran People

Mestizo Salvadorans (also commonly self-identified as ladino) comprise approximately 86% of the Salvadoran population — the dominant national identity per the 2007 DIGESTYC census. The category encompasses Spanish-speaking, Spanish-and-Indigenous-descended Salvadorans concentrated throughout the country. The Indigenous-ancestry contribution is predominantly from Pipil-Nahua and Lenca source populations rather than Maya (El Salvador's pre-conquest population was concentrated in Pipil-Nahua and Lenca cultural-linguistic spheres rather than Maya). The 1932 La Matanza massacre (in which the Salvadoran military killed approximately 30,000 people, predominantly Indigenous Pipil-Nahua, in the wake of a peasant uprising) had a profound demographic and cultural effect, accelerating the abandonment of Indigenous self-identification, traditional dress, and Náhuat language in favor of ladino/mestizo self-identification — producing the contemporary near-uniform mestizo self-identification share. Genome-wide studies place average ancestry at roughly 55-70% Indigenous American, 25-40% European, and 1-5% African.

Typical Mestizo Salvadoran Phenotypes

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

Skin tone spans Fitzpatrick II-IV with III the modal range. 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, reflecting Mesoamerican Indigenous ancestry contribution. Build is intermediate. Within-region variance is moderate.

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