The genus was named and described in 1999 by Bryn Mader and Alexander Kellner. The name
Siroccopteryx means "wing of the
Sirocco", referring to the warm wind that originates in the
North Africa and then goes through the
Mediterranean, and the
Greek word
pteryx, a standard suffix for pterosaur genera that means "wing". The epithet of the type species
S. moroccensis refers to its country of origin. This pterosaur is known only from the front part of the
jaw with teeth. The
holotype fossil, LINHM 016 (Long Island Natural History Museum), was found near
Ksar es Souk, in the province of
Errachidia in the region of Meknes-Tafilalet at 30.4 ° N, 4.9 ° longitude (17.6 ° N, 4.2 ° W longitude) in Beg'aa, west of Hamada du Guiren in southeastern Morocco, in a layer of red
sandstone, a fine-grained alluvium from the
Albian to
Cenomanian. It consists of front teeth and a snout that's not compressed. The
muzzle was long and narrow, with a large elongated terminal part, along with some sort of shaped crest anterior
keel higher than that of
Anhanguera but not as high as that of
Coloborhynchus or
Tropeognathus. The teeth were sharp but short and more robust than in
Anhanguera. The bone is rough and leathery, with strange marks of wrinkles and depressions, this may be a consequence of the conditions of preservation, but the descriptors suggest that indicate a disease, possibly caused by dental abscesses. According to André Veldmeijer, is probably that this damage was
post-mortem and indicate the presence of a horn cover in the ridge. The
wingspan of this large pterosaur should be . It is likely that this animal was a specialized glider, and ventured into the sea off the coast of Africa, to capture
fishes that swam near the surface. ==Phylogeny==