Introduction:
Human skin color isn’t random — it’s the result of thousands of years of adaptation to sunlight intensity. The world’s Indigenous peoples developed a spectrum of melanin levels shaped by geography, climate, and ultraviolet radiation exposure. The chart below connects historic UV levels in major regions to the skin pigmentation of their native populations.

RegionExample Indigenous PeoplesAverage UV IndexTypical Skin Pigmentation
Equatorial AfricaYoruba, Akan, Igbo, Kongo, Nilotic groups11–16+ (Extreme)Very dark eumelanin-rich pigmentation protecting against UV damage and folate loss
Sahel & Horn of AfricaFulani, Hausa, Tuareg, Oromo, Somali9–16 (High–Extreme)Dark to very dark pigmentation with gradual lightening northward
North AfricaAmazigh, Nubian6–10 (Moderate–High)Medium to dark pigmentation with high summer UV peaks
Southern AfricaSan, Khoe-San8–12 (High)Medium to dark brown pigmentation suited to open savanna UV
MelanesiaPapua New Guinea, Solomon Islands, Vanuatu10–16+ (Extreme)Very dark pigmentation genetically distinct but UV-driven
AustraliaAboriginal, Torres Strait Islanders9–15 (High–Extreme)Dark skin with dense melanosomes adapted to harsh sun
South AsiaDravidian, Adivasi, Indo-Aryan groups6–12 (Moderate–High)Medium to dark pigmentation with regional variation
Southeast AsiaMalay, Javanese, Filipino, Khmer8–12 (High)Medium to dark tones with high eumelanin production
East AsiaHan, Korean, Japanese3–6 (Moderate)Light to medium pigmentation, variable by region
ArcticInuit, Sámi, Chukchi0–3 (Low but high reflection)Medium to dark tones despite low UV due to reflective snow and diet-based vitamin D
North AmericaNavajo, Pueblo, Apache, Haudenosaunee3–10 (Moderate–High)Medium pigmentation with local variation
Central AmericaMaya, Garifuna, Kuna8–12 (High)Medium to dark pigmentation
Amazon BasinTikuna, Yanomami10–16+ (Extreme)Medium to dark pigmentation under dense tropical UV
Andes HighlandsQuechua, AymaraModerate index, strong altitude UVMedium pigmentation with clothing and cultural UV adaptations
West Asia (African-adjacent)Arabian Peninsula, Levant7–12 (High)Medium to dark pigmentation matching desert UV
Northern Europe (contrast)Sámi, Celtic ancestors0–5 (Low)Light pigmentation evolved for vitamin D synthesis under weak sunlight
  1. The UV index rows come from satellite climatology and public health datasets. Use them as typical ranges rather than a single fixed number for all seasons. NASA Earth Observations (NEO)+2NOAA Global Monitoring Laboratory+2
  2. The melanin side is best understood with the Jablonski and Chaplin framework. Dark eumelanin-rich skin near the equator protects folate and limits DNA damage. Lighter skin at high latitudes improves vitamin D production. UV explains most of the global variance. PNAS+1
  3. Measured examples exist. Ghanaian mean melanin index around 96 is a published anchor. Newer work quantifies melanin index and the alleles that shape it in African and Native American cohorts. Use those as numeric examples rather than forcing numbers for every group on earth. PMC+2Science+2
  4. The Arctic is the classic exception. Diet and environment change the selective pressures so pigmentation stays darker than latitude alone would predict. PMC

Summary:
This pattern shows that Indigenous skin tones follow UV exposure rather than geography alone. Near-equatorial peoples developed dense eumelanin as a shield, while higher-latitude peoples evolved lighter tones for vitamin D production. The Arctic stands as an exception, balancing low sunlight with reflective surfaces and a nutrient-rich diet.

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