at the Giga Dinosaur Exhibition 2017,
Japan Mononykus is represented by a single
holotype specimen, catalog number
MPC-D 107/6 (formerly IGM 107/6). It was collected in 1987 from the Bügiin Tsav locality of the
Nemegt Formation,
Gobi Desert. This specimen consists of a partial skeleton lacking a tail, and only small fragments of skull bones, including a complete braincase.
Mononykus was originally named
Mononychus in 1993, but later that year, it was renamed because the original name had already been used for a
beetle named by
Johann Schueppel, a German
entomologist. Several other specimens were later misclassified as
Mononykus, including specimens with partial tails (initially misinterpreted as being very short, though later specimens showed they were long and thin) and complete skulls showing a distinct, mostly toothless form. However, these specimens have since been reclassified in the new genus
Shuvuuia. Because of this, many reconstructions of
Mononykus in art and mounted skeletons in museums are in fact based mainly on
Shuvuuia. While
Mononykus was formally described in the 1990s, it was reported that a specimen possibly belonging to this genus had already been unearthed by the
Andrews expedition decades before. The specimen had been in the
American Museum of Natural History collection, labeled simply as "bird-like dinosaur". However, given the reassignment of the other specimens to related genera, and the difference in age (the AMNH specimen is from the older
Djadochta Formation), it is unlikely to be
Mononykus. In 2019, Sungjin Lee and colleagues referred a new specimen from the Nemegt Formation, MPC-D 100/206. This specimen consists of seven caudal vertebrae with a partial left hindlimb, and was discovered on a low slope of the Altan Uul III locality in 2008 by an international team of the Korea-Mongolia International Dinosaur Expedition (KID). The team also found a small assemblage of theropod fossils comprising specimens from other taxa such as
Gobiraptor and
Nemegtonykus. ==Description==