To date, only a single species of
Hagryphus has been named, in 2005 by
Lindsay Zanno and
Scott Sampson, the
type species Hagryphus giganteus. The generic name is derived from Egyptian
Ha, the name of the god of the western desert and a Latinised
Greek γρύψ (
gryps) meaning '
griffin' (a
mythological bird-like creature). The
specific name means "gigantic" in
Latin. The
holotype was discovered in 2002 by
Michael Getty in the
Kaiparowits Formation (Late
Campanian) in the
Grand Staircase–Escalante National Monument of southern Utah. The find was scientifically reported in 2003.
Radiometric dating of rocks from slightly below the rock bed where the fossil was found indicates that the specimen died 75.95
million years ago. Designated UMNH VP 12765, the
type specimen resides in the collections of the
Utah Museum of Natural History in
Salt Lake City. It consists of an incomplete but articulated left manus and the
distal portion of the left radius. The hand lacks the second claw. In the wrist both the semilunate carpal bone and the radiale are preserved. Also some fragmentary foot elements, found at the hillside near the hand, have been catalogued under the same inventory number. ==Description==