The
Parvosuchus holotype specimen, CAPPA/
UFSM 0412, was discovered at the Linha Várzea 2 site in the Pinheiros-Chiniquá Sequence, which belongs to the
Santa Maria Formation of the Santa Maria Supersequence (
Paraná Basin) in
Paraíso do Sul municipality of
Rio Grande do Sul state, Brazil. This locality represents the
Dinodontosaurus Assemblage Zone. The specimen consists of a largely
articulated skeleton, including the skull and lower jaws, the last 11
dorsal vertebrae, two
sacral vertebrae, a
pelvic girdle, part of the right
femur, and a partial left hindlimb (comprising pieces of the femur,
tibia,
fibula, and
calcaneum). In 2024, Rodrigo T. Müller
described Parvosuchus aurelioi as a new genus and species of gracilisuchid pseudosuchians based on these fossil remains. The
generic name,
Parvosuchus, combines "parvus", a
Latin word meaning "small", with "suchus", a
Greek word meaning "crocodile" (
σοῦχος, after
Sobek, the crocodile-headed
ancient Egyptian deity). The
specific name,
aurelioi, honors Pedro L. P. Aurélio, the discoverer of the holotype. == Description ==