The taxonomic specific name,
heinsohni, was chosen in honour of
George Heinsohn, an Australian biologist who worked at
James Cook University, "for his pioneering work on northeast Australian
odontocetes, including the collection and initial analysis of
Orcaella heinsohni specimens which form the basis for much of our knowledge of the new species". New species of large mammals are quite rarely described nowadays, and those that are usually are from remote areas — such as the
saola - or are otherwise rarely encountered, see for example
Perrin's beaked whale, or the
spade-toothed whale, which is only known from two complete specimens and a few bones cast ashore. In fact, the Australian snubfin was the first new dolphin species to be described in 56 years, but was followed, in 2011, by the discovery and description of the
Burrunan dolphin (
T. australis), also from the Australian continent. The Australian snubfin dolphin is unusual among recently described mammals in that a population is accessible for scientific study. Nonetheless, the existence of snubfin dolphins in the waters of northern Australia only become known to western scientists in 1948, when a skull was collected at
Melville Bay (
Gove Peninsula,
Northern Territory). This individual apparently had been caught and eaten by
aboriginals. However, the discovery remained unnoted until discussed by Johnson (1964), and soon thereafter a
Dutch skipper had his observations of the then-unrecognised species published. The common name "snubfin dolphin" was suggested in 1981 and highlights a diagnostic external character and has previously been used in field guides for identification. Two scientists, Isabel Beasley of James Cook University and Peter Arnold of
Museum of Tropical Queensland, took
DNA samples from the population of dolphins off the coast of
Townsville, Queensland, and sent them to the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Southwest Fisheries Science Center in
La Jolla, California. The results showed George Heinsohn was correct in his hypothesis that the Townsville population was a new species. The
holotype QM JM4721 (JUCU MM61) is the skull and some other bones of an adult male found drowned in a shark net at
Horseshoe Bay,
Queensland, on 21 April 1972. It was about 11 years old at the time of its death. ==Description==