Norman Newell discovered a fossil locality near
Garnett, Kansas, United States in 1931, belonging to the Rock Lake Member of the
Stanton Formation. Around 1932, Henry Lane and
Claude Hibbard had collected a variety of animal and plant fossils from the locality. Among these were skeletons of
Petrolacosaurus, which were subsequently described in 1952 by
Frank Peabody. Hoping to find more material, a field team from the
University of Kansas Natural History Museum conducted further excavations in 1953 and 1954; they found trackways,
coelacanth fish, several additional
Petrolacosaurus skeletons, and "
pelycosaur" (early-diverging
synapsid) fossils representing three genera. One of these was a partial skeleton that distinctly differed from the others; when Peabody reported on these discoveries in 1957 paper, he observed that the skeleton was of a primitive
sphenacodontid, but deferred its description to a later time. In 1965,
Robert Carroll found another articulated partial skeleton in the same locality.
Philip Currie attributed this skeleton to the primitive sphenacodontid of Peabody in 1977, and recognized it as a new species of
Haptodus, which he named
Haptodus garnettensis. However, up until that point, all specimens of
H. garnettensis were either badly crushed or immature. Throughout the 1980s, a number of additional specimens were discovered at the locality, including adult and subadult specimens. This allowed
Michel Laurin to identify distinguishing characteristics for
H. garnettensis and to incorporate it into a phylogenetic analysis, which found it to be outside the Sphenacodontidae. He published these results in 1993. Among the additional specimens was a partial skull consisting of a left
maxilla and
lacrimal, which were catalogued in the
Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) as ROM 43608. In a 2013 conference presentation, Spindler, Kirstin Brink, and Graciela Piñeiro suggested that this variation was based on diet, making these taxa a prehistoric analogue of
Darwin's finches. Spindler formally named ROM 43608 as belonging to a new genus and species in 2020, which he named
Kenomagnathus scottae. The
generic name Kenomagnathus is derived from the Greek words κένωμα ("gap") and γνάθος ("jaw"), referencing the
diastema (gap) in its tooth row. Meanwhile, the
specific name scottae honours Diane Scott, a fossil preparator at the
University of Toronto Mississauga who "greatly helped with teaching and specimen handling", inspired Spindler's research, and further prepared the specimen in 2013. ==Description==