The
Ptychotherates fossil material was discovered in the
Coelophysis Quarry at
Ghost Ranch, northern New Mexico, United States in 1982. This fossil site, representing outcrops of the
Chinle Formation, preserves a mass burial of a coeval Triassic fauna, dominated by fossils of
Coelophysis bauri. The specimen is housed in the
Carnegie Museum of Natural History in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, where it is permanently
accessioned as specimen CM 31368. The specimen consists of a nearly complete, albeit somewhat disarticulated, skull. In 2026, Simba Srivastava and
Sterling J. Nesbitt described Ptychotherates bucculentus as a new genus and species of saurischian dinosaur based on these fossil remains, establishing CM 31368 as the
holotype specimen. The
generic name,
Ptychotherates, combines the
Greek words , meaning and , meaning . This alludes to both the challenge of rearticulating the disarticulated holotype skull, as well as the likely carnivorous behavior of the animal. The
specific name,
bucculentus, is a
Latin word meaning , referring to the species' unusually tall . == Classification ==