Konservat-Lagerstätte Menat
The Konservat-Lagerstätte Menat is a Konservat-Lagerstätte located in France dating to the mid-late Paleocene. Though the fossiliferous beds of the sites have been known for a long period of time, with the first large study being published in 1940, Menat has had much less study than other similar deposits. Since the 1980s, a number of excavations have been done by various museums. However, due to the loss of the original sites, most of this is a result of multiple excavations done in the area. The fauna of the lagerstätte is largely made up of insects however, various vertebrates such as mammals, reptiles, and birds have been described from the sites. These fossil were preserved in what was a volcanic maar lake surrounded by a forest with evidence of common forest fires.
History
Before the area was known for the Konservat-Lagerstätte Menat, the area nearby was known for its diatomite quarries which were mined until 1873. After this point, a factory was built outside of the town to avoid intoxication associated with the fumes produced. A number of things were produced using this sediment including abrasives and pigments, and later dynamite. In 1940, Piton would publish the largest study of the fossils which laid the groundwork for others in the future. However, similar to a number of other specimens, a large amount of the fossils he described would be lost in World War II with holotypes being found in a number of different collections today.By the 1950s, mining of at the quarries concluded with the factory later closing in 1964. Even before the mine closed, various people were collecting fossils from the mines associated with the factory. Around this time, the main quarry was turned into a pond with another quarry was filled and overlain with a road. Even though the main quarry was turned into a pond, a number of fossil collectors would travel to the site to collect specimens. This happened so often that in 1979, municipal council prohibited the collection of fossils to protect the site with a local museum being created soon after. During the 1980s, some excavations of the main site were done by the Muséum National d’Histoire Naturelle though this would not last very long. In 1988, the site would become a Regional Natural Reserve with no excavations happening at “Les Grelins” since then.
More work would be done in the late 1990s-early 2000s the paleontological association Rhinopolis would begin more work at the quarry. During this time, the group also would open a new site known as “Maison de retraite”. In 2009, the village would work with Paléovergne to preserve the paleontological heritage of the area. By 2010, “Maison de retraite” was closed to open a retirement home and a new site known as “Les Lavandes” was opened in 2011. In 2012, a test pit titled "Menat 1" was opened with the main purpose of studying the stratigraphy of the site with another test site known as "Menat 2" being opened in 2013. The most recent site to be excavated is the "Stream site" in 2014 which has much better preservation than the two test pits.
Geology
The Konservat-Lagerstätte Menat is known from three more recently excavated sites that these being the main source of more recent geological descriptions. The more well-known and oldest bed, referred to as "Menat 1", is located on the eastern region of the maar lake that was preserved at the site. Menat 1 has a total thickness of and is made up of nine greyish to white silicified claystone beds which range in thickness from. The upper clay beds are weathered at the top, fossils are still present in these beds though the preservation is worse than in the silicified beds. During excavations that took place in 2013 and 2014, a second site referred to as "Menat 2" was first worked on. This site is located near the eastern entrance to the nearby village of Menat and has a thickness of. Similar to the first site, the upper clay beds were weathered though the clay differs more throughout the site. Based on the differences in lithology under these weather beds, Menat 2 has been split into three intervals being A,B, and C.| Interval | Thickness | Lithology |
| A | Dark grey to black in color that is finely laminated with strata from this interval only being weakly weathered. | |
| B | Grey to dark grey in color with the lowest section of the interval being made up of claystone that is a few centimeters in thickness that are not a result of diatomites. | |
| C | Nondescript with noticeable lamination. |
The third site, known as the "Steam Site" was first referenced in the literature in 2018 and has been noted to have better preservation than the other two sites. The beds that make up the site are made up of dark, organic clays and is suggested to be correlated to the “Les Grelins” and “La Mer” quarries. Both charcoal and soot have been found at every horizon of Menat. Fossils found at these sites are preserved on what has been labeled as spongo-diatomites however a more recent study that looked into the composition of these layers found no evidence of diatom sclerites or sponge spicules being present.