Gary Byrd, a part-time
palaeontologist, discovered some remains of this
euornithopod (ribs and an
ungual) during early 1994 at
Flower Mound,
Denton County, north-central
Texas. He informed professional palaeontologist
Yuong-Nam Lee of the find, who arranged for the entire preserved fossil to be excavated. It was first reported upon in 1996 by
Jason Head of the
Dedman College of Humanities and Sciences,
Southern Methodist University. The
type species Protohadros byrdi was described and named by Head in 1998. The genus name is derived from Greek πρῶτος,
protos, "first", en ἁδρός,
hadros, "thick", a reference to the fact that Head considered the species the oldest known
hadrosaur. The
specific name honours Byrd. The
holotype, specimen
SMU 74582, of
Protohadros, was found in the
Woodbine Formation, which dates to the middle
Cenomanian. It consists of a partial skull, pieces of ribs, a hand ungual and a
neural arch. In 1997 Lee named possible tracks of
Protohadros as the
ichnospecies Caririchnium protohadrosaurichnos. This discovery also had larger implications. Before
Protohadros, many researchers leaned toward an Asian origin for hadrosaurids. But the presence of such an early and basal form in North America suggested that a North American origin was just as plausible, if not equally supported. == Description ==