The Lower Palaeozoic Welsh Basin was founded on immature continental crust. During late Precambrian-early Cambrian times, volcanism and sedimentation were influenced by NE-SW-trending faults which defined the NW and SE margins of the basin. During the Cambrian, marine sediments infilled a graben and at the end of the Tremadoc widespread tectonism was associated with an island-arc volcanic episode. In the Ordovician this subduction-related activity was succeeded by mainly tholeiitic volcanism related to back-arc extension, with the locus of arc volcanism sited further N, in the Lake District--Leinster Zone of the Caledonides. In Wales, the Ordovician volcanic activity shifted in time and space. In S Wales volcanism persisted from the middle Arenig through the Llanvirn. In N Wales the volcanism can be broadly divided into dominantly pre-Caradoc activity in southern Snowdonia and an intra-Caradoc episode in central and northern Snowdonia. In eastern Wales, including the Welsh Borderland, and in Ll~,n, both episodes are represented. In all areas faults greatly influenced both volcanism and sedimentation. Intrusive activity was dominated by high-level emplacement of sills. Granite (s.l.) stocks are restricted to central and northern Snowdonia and Ll~n and many were coeval with extrusive volcanism.Volcanism in the basin was essentially bimodal with voluminous eruptions of tholeiitic basalts with ocean-floor affinities, and of rhyolites. Minor volumes of andesite to rhyodacite resulted from low-pressure fractional crystallization of the tholeiitic basalts. Available evidence suggests that the rhyolites resulted mainly from crustal fusion, although in some instances evolution by crystal fractionation from intermediate magma has been proposed. Calc-alkaline assemblages are petrographically distinct, of minor occurence and, contrary to previous conclusions, are relatively insignificant in the characterization of the tectonic environment of the basin.Throughout the basin, volcanism was generally succeeded by deposition of black muds and then turbidite-dominated sequences.