at the
Burpee Museum of Natural History In 2002, a tyrannosauroid specimen (BMR P2002.4.1, "
Jane", now the holotype of
Nanotyrannus lethaeus) was recovered from strata belonging to the
Maastrichtian-age
Hell Creek Formation in
Carter County, Montana, United States. Alongside that specimen was the fifth
cervical (neck) vertebra of an azhdarchid pterosaur. Catalogued as BMR P2002.2, it was originally assigned to
cf. Quetzalcoatlus sp. In 2014, Alexander Averianov identified the specimen as indeterminate azhdarchid. In 2021, Brian Andres and
Wann Langston Jr. classified BMR P2002.2 more broadly as an indeterminate
azhdarchiform. In 2025, a team consisting of Henry Thomas, David W. E. Hone, Timothy Gomes, and Joseph E. Peterson re-examined the specimen, determining that it belonged to a novel genus more closely related to
Arambourgiania philadelphiae from Jordan than to
Quetzalcoatlus. The authors designated BMR P2002.2 as the holotype of a new pterosaur genus and species,
Infernodrakon hastacollis. The
generic name,
Infernodrakon, combines the
Italian word
inferno (derived from the
Latin infernus), meaning "hell", after the discovery of the holotype in the Hell Creek Formation, with the
Ancient Greek δράκων (
drakon), meaning "dragon". The
specific name,
hastacollis, combines "
hasta"—a type of Roman spear—with the Latin root
collum, meaning "neck", referencing the extremely long and thin morphology of the preserved vertebra. This name also references the specific epithet of the related
Azhdarcho lancicollis, which is derived from the Roman
lancea javelin. The intended full binomial name meaning is "spear-necked dragon from Hell". == Description ==