As the northern boundary of Tibetan Plateau, the Altyn strike\|slip fault in western China has a very important implication to the tectonic division in the middle Asia continent, and has become a hot topic for the research on continental dynamics of Tibetan Plateau. During the research of our project funded by NSFC, we collected a sample of Caledonian mylonitized granite in the north of Dangjin pass and two samples of Jurassic meta\|sedimentary rocks in Qaidam gate fault\|valley and Geshi fault\|valley. The texture study shows that all samples were reformed by ductile deformation with undulating extinction and elongated quartzes. The metamorphic p\|T condition are estimated to be 350~500℃ and 150~450MPa They contain the syntectonic\|growing minerals such as white mica, chlorite, sericite and biotite etc. By dating these minerals, we obtain a group white mica 40 Ar/ 39 Ar isochronal age of 89 2~91 7Ma and a (46 6±6 4)Ma sericite 40 Ar/ 39 Ar apparent age. These data are very important to determine the strike\|slip age of Altyn fault.The 40 Ar/ 39 Ar age data (91~46Ma), we obtained, are reported for the first time in the researches of Altyn fault belt. The ages of 91~89Ma indicate that Altyn fault began to slip with slight metamorphism around late Jurassic. These ages are consistent with the ages of the collision between Kohistan\|Ladakh massif (northwestern India) and Eurasian continent at 102~85Ma.This suggests that the strike\|slip movement of Altyn fault should be related to the formation of the so\|called“Western tectonic joint" in Nepal\|western Kunlun area. The age of 46Ma should represent the overprint age of the tectono\|thermal event during main collision between Indian and Eurasian continents along the Yarlung Zangbo River. With the continent\|continent collision of Indian and Eurasian Plates, Altyn fault underwent Multi\|phase strike\|slip events in late Paleocene—Oligocene (37~35Ma), Miocene (22~20Ma), Miocene—Pliocene (8~6Ma), Pliocene (2 5Ma) and early Pleistocene (1~0 7M
Ge Xiaohong, Ye Huiwen, Liu Yongjiang, Liu Junlai, Pan Hongxun, Ren Shoumai (College of Earth Sciences, Changchun University of Science and Technology, Changchun 130061,China)