The first
phosphate deposits in Quercy were discovered in 1869 and published by Daubré and Trutat independently in 1871. The first fossils from the formation were described by Delfortie (
1872) and Gervais in the same year and extensively studied by Filhol from
1877 onwards. The first geologic investigation of the formation was performed by Thévenin in 1903, and apart from a description by Gèze in 1938, the paleontological richness was not studied until a team of researchers of the
Universities of Montpellier and Paris visited the site in
1965. The
karstified phosphate deposits are found from the
Lot and
Célé river valleys in the north to the left bank of the
Aveyron in the south and from the
Villefranche Fault in the east to the
lacustrine deposits of the
Aquitaine Basin in the west. The formation is found in fissures (karst) incising
Jurassic and
Triassic rocks east of
Cahors. The age of the fossiliferous unit, in which almost 12,000 specimens were found ranges from the MP16 to MP28 zones of the
European land mammal age classification. == Paleontological significance ==