The Aytas are called Negritos for their dark skin and kinky hair. They landed on the archipelago more than 30,000 thousand years ago and are thought to be the earliest inhabitants of the Philippines. The Negritos share some physical features with African pygmy populations.
Nowadays, rare is the Ayta wearing traditional clothing: the bahag (loincloth) for men and wraparound skirts for women. They now use urban attire. Ayta women are skilled in weaving, plaiting, and producing household containers, rattan hammocks, and winnowing baskets of excellent quality. Nomadic Ayta build temporary settlements made of indigenous materials, such as forked sticks, palm or banana leaves, cogon, and bamboo.
Communities of Mag-Indi Aytas inhabit Zambales and Pampanga; they are predominantly found in Florida Blanca and Porac, Pampanga; and San Marcelino, Zambales. Like Mag-Anchi, Mag-Indi is also a Sambalic language.
Sources:
Ethnologue, www.ethnologue.com
Oracle Think Quest. Negrito, http://library.thinkquest.org/
Cultural Heritage. Philippine Tribes: Aeta, http://www.globalpinoy.com/
Joshua Projects. Ayta Abellen, http://www.joshuaproject.net/
Education for and about Indigenous People, http://www.peoplesoftheworld.org