The
Chakisaurus fossil material was discovered in sediments of the
Huincul Formation in
Pueblo Blanco Natural Reserve (previously known as the Violante Farm locality) near Ezequiel Ramos-Mexía Lake in
Río Negro Province, Argentina. The
holotype specimen, MPCA Pv 816, consists of several partial
dorsal vertebrae, a partial
sacrum, twelve
caudal vertebrae, an incomplete
haemal arch, partial left
femur and
fibula, partial right
tibia and
calcaneus, and two
toe bones from the fourth digit. Three additional
paratype specimens were also assigned to
Chakisaurus, found in a group about . The first is MPCA Pv 822, which belongs to a juvenile individual, including five dorsal vertebral centra, a left humerus, and the bottoms of both femora. The second is MPCA Pv 823, another juvenile individual consisting of the top of a right
ulna. The third is MPCA Pv 813, which includes eight dorsal vertebral centra, two partial
ribs, two partial haemal arches, the bottom of a right
radius, a toe bone of digit four, and a
toe claw of digit two or four. An additional cervical vertebra (possibly the fourth), MPCN Pv 846, was also referred to
Chakisaurus. In 2024, Alvarez Nogueira et al.
described Chakisaurus nekul as a new genus and species of ornithopod based on these fossil remains. The
generic name, "
Chakisaurus", combines "Chaki", an
Aonikenk word meaning "elder guanaco"—, referring to the species
Lama guanicoe—with the
Greek "
σαῦρος" ("
sauros"), meaning "lizard". The
specific name, "
nekul", is a
Mapudungun word meaning "swift".
Chakisaurus represents the tenth
basal ornithopod named from South America. However, it is only the first
ornithischian from the Huincul Formation to receive a scientific name. == Description ==