Clark today tweeted "In category of I can scarcely believe what I'm reading: check out this on company wanting to mine 23-million-year-old fossil site in Otago NZ ..."
Later, in a thread of replies, she is asked if she had seen Curran "defending" the plan.
The former PM's short reply is: "Saw it. #SaveFouldenMaar."
Australian company Plaman Resources, which owns the site, wants to mine up to 500,000 tonnes of diatomite as an animal feed supplement, but is waiting on approval from the Overseas Investment Office to buy a neighbouring farm.
Curran said she was frustrated there was still no decision, 15 months after the application was made. She had written to Conservation and Land Information Minister Eugenie Sage about the situation.
If approval was granted, a resource consent process would still need to be followed, she said.
"There will be the ability for the local community and anyone else to support or reject the project and have a public discussion at that point and the delay in the OIO process has been hampering the ability to have a proper conversation about it.''
Because of the commercial sensitivity surrounding the application much of the information was not yet public, she said.
Curran said she had talked to company representatives at the site and had been given assurances about the nature of the project and the economic impact it could have on the region.
Former Labour minister Clayton Cosgrove has been hired by the company as an adviser but Curran said she met the company's New Zealand representatives directly and not through an intermediary.
Concerns about the low quality of the diatomite at the site and the destruction of the entire fossil field were unfounded, she said.
"I do want the community to have the opportunity to ask their questions and have them answered and also accept any extraction process involves change in a community, but let's actually discuss facts instead of misinformation.''
A spokesman for Sage said as a decision had not been made on Plaman's application and the minister's role was as a decision-maker in the process, it was not appropriate for her to comment.
As well as from former PM Clark, there has been opposition from the scientific community who say the site is the only one of its kind in the southern hemisphere.
Associate Prof Daphne Lee, of the University of Otago geology department, has extensively studied the maar and written more than 40 papers about the fossils she has found there.
A document authored by investment bankers Goldman Sachs and leaked to the Otago Daily Times suggests the mine would only be commercially viable if full production forecasts were met.
Plaman Resources had previously given assurances the site would remain available for scientific research, but it was hard to imagine any research co-existing with a full production mine, Prof Lee said.
"If it was possible to do limited mining and keep half the deposit intact for future scientific research I think that would be an option, but from reading about the report that wouldn't be an option.''
A similar site in Germany is a Unesco World Heritage Site and the maar was as significant, she said.
Plaman New Zealand general manager Craig Pilcher did not respond to a request for comment yesterday.
- Otago Daily Times