First mentioned as a small dromaeosaurid by Wolfe and Kirkland in their description of Zuniceratops,[3]Suskityrannus was informally referred to as the "Zuni coelurosaur",[4] "Zuni tyrannosaur",[5] and by the 2011 documentary Planet Dinosaur "Zunityrannus" prior to its scientific description.[6]
The original fossils were found in 1998 by Robert Denton, a professional geologist from Virginia, and a native Mesa teen Sterling Nesbitt, who was a museum volunteer that came to a dig with paleontologist Doug Wolfe.[7][8][9]
In 2019 Suskityrannus was formally described as a genus of primitive tyrannosauroid.[2][10] Both the holotype specimen MSM P4754 (partially articulated skull and a few postcranial bones) and the paratype specimen MSM P6178 (partially articulated and associated remains including a few skull bones and an incomplete postcranial skeleton) are preserved in the collections of the Arizona Museum of Natural History, and they both show the phylogenetically earliest known arctometatarsalian foot in tyrannosauroids.[2]
Description
Suskityrannus is a small tyrannosaur, with the skull of known specimens measuring 25–32 cm (9.8–12.6 in) long, which grew similarly to earlier tyrannosauroids like Guanlong.[2] The holotype and the paratype belong to young individuals that didn't reach skeletal maturity, but the histological analyses revealed that the bone tissues and vascularization are different from those found in young individuals of large-bodied tyrannosaurids during the Campanian-Maastrichtian age, so the adults would have been significantly smaller than mature tyrannosaurids.[2]
Classification
Suskityrannus filled the major phylogenetic, morphological and temporal gaps that researchers needed to piece together tyrannosauroid evolution.[11] Below is the phylogenetic analysis on the placement of Suskityrannus.[2]