The species was named by Attila Ősi in 2005. The generic name is derived from Hungary and the Greek
sauros,
lizard. The
specific name honours András Torma, the amateur paleontologist who discovered the fossil site in 2000. Four specimens of
Hungarosaurus tormai are known, all collected from an open-pit
bauxite mine near the village of Iharkút, Veszprém County, in the Bakony Mountains (Transdanubian Range) of western Hungary. The quarry exposes the
Csehbánya Formation (which overlies the Halimba Formation, also Cretaceous in age), which is a floodplain and channel deposit consisting largely of sandy clays and sandstone beds. The specimen designated as the
holotype is MTM Gyn/404 (in the collections of the Magyar Természettudományi Múzeum,
Budapest, Hungary) and consists of 450 bones, including portions of the skull (premaxilla, left prefrontal, left lacrimal, right postorbital, jugal and quadratojugal, left frontal, pterygoid, vomer, the right quadrate and a fragment of the left quadrate, basioccipital, one hyoid), an incomplete right mandible, three cervical vertebrae, six dorsal vertebrae, ten caudal vertebrae, ossified tendon fragments, three cerival and thirteen dorsal ribs, five chevrons, the left scapulocoracoid, right scapula, portions of the right manus, a partial pelvis, and more than one hundred osteoderms. ==Description==