The palaeogeographical interrelationships between benthic communities of middle Palaeozoic carbonate platforms from both sides of the Urals are compared. The evolution of endemism in time as well as of taxonomic diversity and affinity trends in Silurian and Devonian brachiopods, tabulate corals and trilobites are investigated for the first time using the internationally adopted standard of biozonation. Preliminary results indicate that, in all considered biotas, diversity and affinity rates were extremely low at the beginning of the Silurian. They increase thereafter until the late Middle Devonian and the Late Devonian, where a high degree of identity was reached. The observed overall increase in biogeographic affinity is interpreted as being the result of convergent plate movements between the eastern Uralian oceanic domain, where platform carbonates were deposited either on island arcs or on microplates, and the passive East European margin. A certain delay in the progress of faunal relationships is observed in the early Middle Devonian which may be related to the emplacement of the Magnitogorsk volcanic megazone at that time.