The
holotype skull (
TMM 43631-1) that would be named
Calsoyasuchus was discovered in 1997 by members of an expedition composed of crews from
Texas Memorial Museum of the
University of Texas at Austin, the
Museum of Comparative Zoology at
Harvard University, and the
Seba Dalkai Navajo Nation School. It was found in the middle third of the
silty
facies of the Kayenta Formation, near the
Adeii Eechii Cliffs. The skull is missing the lower jaws, part of the
palate, most of the
suspensorium (the bones that make up the region where the upper and lower jaws articulate), and the
occiput and
braincase. Sutures between the skull bones are mostly fused. As preserved, it is about 38.0 centimeters (15.0 in) long, making its owner a moderately sized animal. The skull was long, low, and curved so that both extremities were higher than the middle. The
premaxilla bones that formed the end of the snout were enlarged to form a wide tip; there were at least four teeth in the right premaxilla and five in the left. The left
maxilla (main tooth-bearing bone of the upper jaw) is more complete than the right, and had at least 29 teeth. There was a deep groove along the midline of the nasals and the frontals; the frontals were fused into a single bone, as is seen in other adult mesoeucrocodylians. Unlike derived neosuchians, it had external
antorbital fenestrae. Tykoski and colleagues subjected the skull to
CT scanning, which revealed internal cavities and air passages, and showed that it had a double-walled secondary palate similar to that of
true crocodylians, and similar pneumatic cavities as well. ==Phylogeny==