It is the largest
dromaeosaur to be discovered in the
Southern Hemisphere; Novas
et al. estimated that
Austroraptor measured in length from head to tail and weighed . In 2014, Benson and colleagues estimated that
Austroraptor weighed up to . The skull is low and elongated, much more so than that of other dromaeosaurs, and measures .
Austroraptor has conical, non-serrated teeth, which Novas
et al. compared to those of
spinosaurids, based on how the
enamel of the surface of its teeth is fluted. The relative length of its arms has caused
Austroraptor to be compared to another, more famous short-armed dinosaur,
Tyrannosaurus, though there is no close relationship between the two taxa.
Distinguishing traits However little of the entire skeleton was found, the bones that are available for analysis possess some distinct characteristics that differentiate
Austroraptor from other dromaeosaurs.
Austroraptor is particularly notable because of its relatively short forearms, which are much shorter in proportion when compared to the majority of the members of Dromaeosauridae. According to Novas
et al. 2008,
Austroraptor can be distinguished based on the following characteristics: • A
lacrimal that is highly
pneumatized, with the descending process strongly curved rostrally, and with a caudal process flaring out horizontally above the orbit. • The lack of a dorsomedial process on the postorbital bone for articulation with the
frontal bone, and with the squamosal process extremely reduced. • The maxillary and dentary teeth are small, conical, devoid of serrations and fluted. • The humerus is short, at approximately 46% of length of the femur. • The pedal phalanx II-2 is transversely narrow, contrasting with the extremely robust phalanx IV-2. In 2012, comparison with a second specimen showed that the fourth toe was not especially broad; the purported second phalanx had in fact been a first phalanx. ==Classification==