Abstract: | The gene pool of the indigenous population of Sakha Republic (Yakutia) has been studied within the borders of this republic coinciding with the main area of Yakuts, which was formed by the end of the 19th century and have remained stable until the present time. Maps of the geographic variation of the integrated characteristics of the Yakut gene pool, including the principal components, parameters of genetic diversity, and genetic distances from the "average" Yakut population are presented. It has been demonstrated that ethnographers' reports on intense internal assimilation in modem Yakutia agree with genetic data. The stratification of the Yakut gene pool reflected in the maps of two principal components corresponds to the observed general (H(T)) and interpopulation (FST) gene diversities. |