Twenty-six new age determinations by the fission-track method establish a chronology for volcanism, intrusion, and mineralization in the Thomas Range, Keg Mountain, and Desert Mountain, in western Utah. The fission-track ages confirm D. R. Shawe's three-fold classification of igneous rocks. The oldest group of rocks consists of flows, agglomerates, and some ash-flow tuffs that were deposited 38-39 m.y. ago. The middle group contains widespread rhyolitic ash-flow tuffs that originated from local volcanic centers 30-32 m.y. ago. A dike emplaced along the probable ring-fracture zone of the Keg caldera about 31 m.y. ago indicates that caldera collapse occurred soon after eruption of ash-flow tuffs. Rocks believed to belong-to the middle group also were intruded by the quartz monzonite of Desert Mountain 27-30 m.y. ago. Little or no igneous activity took place within the next 20 m.y., during which time the region was strongly broken by Basin-and-Range faulting. Rhyolites of the youngest group were extruded 8-10 m.y. ago in the Keg Mountain area and 6-7 m.y. ago in the Thomas Range. The beryllium-fluorite mineralization at Spor Mountain occurred after the rhyolitic volcanism in the Thomas Range.