The Carboniferous sedimentary history of the Pomeranian Basin (NW Poland) begins with Hastarian open-marine carbonates and is terminated with ?lower Asbian terrestrial deposits in the north-eastern part and, ?upper Asbian or Brigantian, open-marine shales in the south-western part of the basin. The ?latest Viséan, Serpukhovian and early Bashkirian was a period of regional non-deposition and erosion. In the Upper Bashkirian-Gzhelian strata, an alluvial depositional environment was recognized.The Mississippian depositional history of the area has been punctuated by several, regional-scale events: (1) during the late Famennian-early Tournaisian times anoxic conditions developed over the entire basin. The results of both conodont and miospore studies show the presence of a stratigraphic gap within this sequence (which also show extremely reduced thicknesses), that comprises the uppermost Famennian (Middle and Upper praesulcata conodont zones) and the lowermost Hastarian (sulcata-sandbergi conodont zones). This stratigraphic gap probably resulted from some chemical and/or hydrodynamical factors rather than from any tectonic uplift; (2) volcanic activity on the nearby East European Craton (EEC), which was the source of large amounts of detrital (volcaniclastic) material supplied to the Pomeranian Basin during the Early crenulata-?early anchoralis-latus chrons (late Hastarian-early Ivorian), caused with time the gradual shallowing of the sedimentary environment. This shallowing trend began in the Early typicus Chron (early Ivorian) and terminated with terrestrial deposits in the early Asbian.The sedimentary succession and specific phenomena recognized in this structurally unstable basin, displays a pattern partly different from that observed in some areas in Europe. It would appear that other local factors, such as tectonic mobility of the hinterland area (EEC) and the Pomeranian Basin floor, were the possible causes of observed variations and relative sea-level changes.