The strata of the
Yuliangze Formation are in the county of Jiayin, on the Amur River, which lies on the border between
China and
Russia. Hadrosaur fossils had been recovered from the formation in the summers of 1916–1917, as part of expeditions conducted by the Russian Geological Committee. Taxa described based on these early expeditions include
Mandchurosaurus amurensis and
Saurolophus krystofovici, both named by Anatoly Riabinin. The former's validity has been historically debated, while the latter, based solely on a partial
ischium, is considered a
nomen dubium. Starting in 1975, various Chinese institutions conducted excavations in Yuliangze strata. From that year onwards, large bonebeds consisting of both juveniles and adults of a large hadrosaur were discovered in the strata of the
Yuliangze Formation. The hadrosaur fossils in the bonebeds appear to belong to a single taxon, which apparently died en masse in the vicinity. One specimen recovered from the Yuliangze was CUST J-V1251-57, a partial skull. In 2000,
Pascal Godefroit, Shuqin Zan and Liyong Jin erected a new genus and species,
Charonosaurus jiayinensis, to accommodate the Yuliangze material, and designated CUST J-V1251-57 as the holotype specimen. The genus name is derived from
Charon, the ferryman from
Greek mythology who carried the dead across the dead river Acheron (or Styx), and the ancient Greek "
sauros" (lizard). The species name
jiayinensis refers to the type locality (site) Jiayin. ==Description==