Tinirau was a fairly large, predatory fish about a meter long and with a deep, compact body. The head was sizeable, with a large terminal mouth and numerous teeth. The tail was
heterocercal. The remaining fins with the exception of the
pectoral fins were situated behind the middle of the body similar to the situation seen in
pikes, giving the animal a large tail surface suitable for great bursts of speed. It shares many advanced features with later tetrapodomorphs in the
pelvic limb bones and
glenoids (shoulder sockets). By the time
Tinirau appeared, many stem tetrapods had already developed the three major hindlimb bones of tetrapods: the
femur,
tibia, and
fibula. While derived stem tetrapods like
Panderichthys had hindlimb configurations very similar to the first land-living tetrapods, some early forms such as
Eusthenopteron possessed a prominent postaxial process of the
fibula hanging over the
fibulare bone below it.
Tinirau is the earliest known stem tetrapod to have a greatly reduced postaxial process, and a fibula more like those of later tetrapods. Like those of the Late Devonian
Panderichthys and
Ichthyostega, the glenoid of
Tinirau is elongated along the anteroposterior (forward-backward) axis of the body. The lengthening of the glenoid corresponds with a flattening of the proximal end of the humerus, a feature common in the forelimbs of more advanced stem tetrapods. Although the pectoral limb bones and girdle were not strong enough to support the weight of
Tinirau out of water, glenoid lengthening and other changes to the proximal forelimb were among the first steps in the transformation from pectoral fin to forelimb. == Phylogeny ==