In 2001, several sauropod skeletons were uncovered at the "Bustingorry II" site at
Villa El Chocón, including remains belonging to both
Choconsaurus and
Bustingorrytitan. This sauropod was announced in a conference the same year by Simón, and received the informal name of "Sauropodus". It was first described in 2011, in a thesis by María Edith Simón. It was named as a new genus and species of titanosaur in 2023. The generic name, "
Bustingorrytitan", honors Manuel Bustingorry, the person who owns the land where the fossils were found, combining his name with the Greek
titan, in reference to its large size. The specific name, "
shiva", is named after the Hindu god
Shiva, who destroys and transforms the universe, in reference to the Cenomanian-
Turonian faunal turnover. The holotype of
Bustingorrytitan is MMCH-Pv 59/1-40, a partial skeleton including a tooth, vertebra, possible ribs, a scapula, a humerus, a femur, tibiae and a fibula. Four specimens are known, together including parts of the dentary and postcranial skeleton. == Description ==