According to the 1873 report of Major
William Gilbert Mair, in 1870, a
Māori chief said that he had killed a
kaweau that he found under the bark of a dead
rātā tree in the
Waimana Valley in
Te Urewera on the North Island of New Zealand. This is the only documented report of anyone ever seeing a
kawekaweau alive. Mair reported the chiefs description of the animal as being "two feet long, and as thick as a man's wrist; colour brown, striped longitudinally with dull red". A single stuffed specimen was "discovered" in the basement of the
Natural History Museum of Marseille in 1986; the origins and date of collection of the specimen remain a mystery, as it was unlabelled when it was found. Attempts to extract DNA from the sole specimen in 1994 were unsuccessful.
Trevor Worthy suggested in 2016 that the specimen originated on an island of
New Caledonia rather than New Zealand, due to a lack of fossil evidence for the lizard in New Zealand caves despite abundant remains of all other known species of New Zealand gecko. This was confirmed by the successful sequencing of the specimen's
mitochondrial DNA in 2023, which found that it was nested within the New Caledonian species of
Diplodactylidae rather than the New Zealand species, and distinctive enough to warrant placement in the new genus
Gigarcanum. According to the authors, the genus name
Gigarcanum derives from "a combination of two words: the Latin adjective
gigas, meaning giant and taken from the Ancient Greek Γίγᾱς, and the Latin noun
arcanum, meaning secret or mystery. The combination refers to the size of the type species and the unknown provenance of the only known specimen". In the DNA analysis, the relationships of New Caledonian geckos were poorly resolved, but
Gigarcanum was usually found to be most closely related to the New Caledonia genera
Eurydactylodes,
Mniarogekko and/or
Rhacodactylus. == Description ==