Between 2007 and 2009, the Japan-Thailand Dinosaur Project carried out excavations at the village of Saphan Hin, subdistrict
Suranaree,
Mueang Nakhon Ratchasima District, in
Nakhon Ratchasima Province. The finds included bones from a theropod new to science. In 2019, the
type species Siamraptor suwati was named and described by Duangsuda Chokchaloemwon, Soki Hattori, Elena Cuesta, Pratueng Jintasakul, Masateru Shibata and Yoichi Azuma. The generic name is derived from "Siam", the former name of Thailand, and the
Latin word
raptor ("robber"). The
specific name honours
Suwat Liptapanlop, who supported the Northeastern Research Institute of Petrified Wood and Mineral Resources. The
holotype, NRRU-F01020008, was found in a layer of the Khok Kruat Formation dating from the
Aptian. It consists of a rear right lower jaw including the surangular, prearticular and articular. Further material referred to
S. suwati includes the isolated remains of at least three individuals, mostly consisting of skull and lower jaw fragments as well as a manual ungual, a series of three cervical vertebrae, two partial ischia, a caudal vertebra, two dorsal vertebral centra and a neural spine, a partial tibia and a left pedal phalanx. == Description ==