The only specimen includes a neck
vertebra, a back vertebra and part of a second, six tail vertebra, two
chevrons, fragmentary ribs, the right
sternal plate, the right
shoulder blade, and the left
thigh bone (femur). This individual may have measured when alive; the thigh bone measures 76 centimetres in length. However, the vertebral
neural arches have been found separated from the vertebral
centra, indicating that these elements were not fused with each other; thus, this individual probably was not fully grown. Early
sauropodomorphs were primitively
bipedal (two-legged).
Isanosaurus, being one of the first sauropods known, already shows a
quadrupedal locomotion (with all four legs on the ground). The legs were column-like, as indicated by the robust and straight thigh bone. In
prosauropods, but also in the very basal sauropod
Antetonitrus, the thigh bone was slightly sigmoidal (S-curved). Also, like in other sauropods, bony processes of the femur were reduced in
Isanosaurus; most notably, the
lesser trochanter was lacking. Additional important features can be found in the vertebrae. The neck vertebrae were distinctly
opisthocoelous (convex at the front and hollow at the back), forming
ball-and-socket joints with neighbouring vertebrae. The tail vertebrae, on the other hand, were
amphicoelous (concave at both ends). The dorsal
neural spines were very high, like those of some later sauropods, unlike the low prosauropod neural spines. The lateral sides of the vertebrae were concave, but not deeply excavated (a structure known as
pleurocoels) as in later sauropods. == Phylogeny ==