Fossils of
Aenigmastropheus were first described by the British paleontologist Dr.
Francis Rex Parrington in 1956, in an article titled as "A problematic reptile from the Upper Permian". Parrington reported collecting these remains in the
Ruhuhu Valley in the
Songea District of southern
Tanzania in 1933, and considered them to come from a single individual. This specimen, UMZC T836, in currently housed at the
University Museum of Zoology, in
Cambridge, UK. UMZC T836 consists of a partial
postcranial
skeleton including five posterior
cervical and anterior
dorsal vertebrae, the distal half of the right
humerus, a fragment of probable left humeral shaft, the proximal end of the right
ulna, and three indeterminate fragments of bone, one of which may represent a partial
radius. In his article, Parrington (1956) highlighted the apparent contrast between the primitive appearance of the forelimb bones and the more derived appearance of the vertebrae, resembling those of
archosaurs. Thus, he concluded that the specimen did not bear close resemblances to any known
synapsid, including the ones collected at the same locality, and suggested possible close affinities with archosaurs due to the vertebral morphology and the presence of hollow limb bones and an
ectepicondylar groove on the humerus. Hughes (1963) subsequently noted similar vertebral morphology in some "
pelycosaurian" synapsids and concluded that, as the combination of a derived vertebral column and a primitive limb structure occurs in
proterosuchian archosauromorphs, UMZC T836 might possibly be a proterosuchian ancestor. Subsequent studies came to a similar conclusion, listing the specimen as a possible member of
Proterosuchidae, however Gower and Sennikov (2000) noted that it still could possibly be archosaurian. Ezcurra, Butler and Gower (2013) indicated that UMZC T836 is an archosauromorph likely not referable to
Archosauriformes, and thus not proterosuchian.
Aenigmastropheus was first erected for UMZC T836 by Martín D. Ezcurra, Torsten M. Scheyer and Richard J. Butler in
2014 and the
type species is
Aenigmastropheus parringtoni, following a re-description of this "problematic reptile". The
generic name is derived from
aenigma, "enigmatic" in
Latin, and
stropheus, "vertebra" in
Greek, in allusion to the problematic taxonomic history of the
holotype and only known specimen. The
specific name,
parringtoni, honors Dr. Francis Rex Parrington for the discovery and initial description of UMZC T836, and for his contribution to the understanding of Permo-Triassic
amniotes. UMZC T836 was collected in fossil-bearing levels that correspond to locality B35 of Stockley (1932), which is located close to the road near the town of Ruanda in the Songea District, part of the "Lower Bone Bed" corresponding to his K6 horizon of the Songea Series. This outcrop is currently assigned to the upper part of the
Usili Formation, formerly known as the Kawinga Formation, of the Songea Group of the
Ruhuhu Basin. Recent studies have described this formation as a 260 meters thick fluviolacustrine succession made up of a lowermost conglomeratic interval that is approximately 5 meters thick, grading up into a trough cross-bedded, coarse-grained, sandstone-dominated interval that is 25–40 meters thick, overlain by massive nodular siltstone and laminated mudstone beds with minor ribbon sandstones forming the bulk of the succession. Sidor
et al. (2010) recognized only one tetrapod faunal assemblage in the Usili Formation, which includes, in addition to
Aenigmastropheus,
temnospondyls,
pareiasaurs,
gorgonopsians,
therocephalians,
cynodonts, and
dicynodonts. Based on UMZC catalogue and unpublished field notes of Parrington in UMZC collections, an isolated
maxilla of a dicynodont listed as
cf. "Esoterodon" uniseries (UMZC T969, now
Endothiodon), as well as other dicynodont (UMZC T779, T1170) and gorgonopsid (UMZC T882, T883) remains, were collected at locality B35, along with UMZC T836. Based on the possible presence of
Endothiodon, and the more recently described presence of the dicynodonts
Dicynodon huenei and possibly
Katumbia parringtoni, the faunistic associations of Usili Formation appear to directly correlated with these of the
Zambian
Upper Madumabisa Mudstone. The well-supported correlation of the later with the rocks of the
Cistecephalus Assemblage Zone in the
South African
Karoo Basin implies that the Usili Formation can be considered a lateral equivalent of this assemblage zone. Therefore, the Usili Formation spans the middle–late
Wuchiapingian stage of the middle
Late Permian, approximately 260–255
million years ago. ==Description==