Pachycheilosuchus is
based on SMU 75278, a right
maxilla, with the remains of at minimum 13 other individuals also known, representing most of the skeleton except hands, feet, and part of the skull. The remains were recovered near the top of the
Glen Rose Formation of
Erath County in central Texas, in rocks dating from the early
Albian faunal stage. The
fossils were found in a
bonebed in a
limestone rock unit, with scattered lenses of
mudstone, probably deposited in a shallow, protected, nearshore
brackish water setting. The
type species is
P. trinquei, in honor of Lance Trinque, a field assistant who helped discover and excavate the site where this animal's remains were found. This genus was named and described by Jack Rogers in 2003. It was not a large crocodylomorph; for example, of the collected
thigh bones, the longest measured only 91.2 millimeters long (3.59 in). Its body length was initially estimated at , using two methods. Although the remains are small, it appears that at least some of the individuals were mature, with fusion of parts of individual vertebrae. Additionally, a 49 millimeter-long (1.9 in) crocodyloid
egg was recovered with the skeletal fossils, and is of reasonable size to have come from an individual with a length of 63.5 centimeters, suggesting that some of the individuals were sexually mature. The maxillae had overhanging lips along their outer margins, and the tooth row was set away from the margin. One maxilla has an oval puncture mark, 5 millimeters by 6.5 millimeters (0.2 by 0.26 in), probably made by a larger predator. The snout was short and flat. The vertebrae were procoelous in the neck, back, and part of the tail, and the procoelous shape was most strongly developed in the neck vertebrae. Procoely is a type of vertebral articulation, based on the shape of the anterior and posterior faces of the
vertebral centrum. In procoelous vertebrae, the vertebrae articulate with a concave leading surface and a convex posterior surface. The vertebrae of
Pachycheilosuchus had a slight dimple or concavity on the posterior surface as well, making these bones different from the procoelous vertebrae that are a hallmark of
derived eusuchian crocodilians. Because of this difference, and because
Pachycheilosuchus did not have many of the other features of eusuchians, it probably
evolved procoely independently. The
ulna, the major bone of the forearm, is strongly curved.
Pachycheilosuchus had among its armor a unique shield of bony scutes for its neck, composed of six individual fused scutes. ==Classification==