Hanyusuchus is an extinct genus of gavialid crocodilian from the Holocene of South China. It contains a single species, Hanyusuchus sinensis. Reaching a total body length of , it shares characteristics of both tomistomines and derived gharials, such as a possibly sexually dimorphic vocal structure. Cut marks found on multiple fossil specimens, as well as archaeological evidence, suggest the presence of repeated conflicts between Hanyusuchus and humans. Hanyusuchus was a recent species, living in southern China from approximately the 4th millennium BC (during the Bronze Age) to as late as the 15th century AD, perhaps even later, when increased efforts of government officials and habitat destruction likely led to its extinction.
Fossils of Hanyusuchus were initially discovered between February 1963 and February 1980, with a total of 6 specimens ranging from skulls to postcrania and osteoderms being known. These however were dismissed as belonging to a modern genus and forgotten for the following years. Eventually the bones were recognized as belonging to a unique genus and described as such by Masaya Iijima and colleagues in 2022. Hanyusuchus is named after Han Yu (768–824), a Chinese poet and government official active during the Tang dynasty. After a rash of crocodile attacks on humans and lifestock, Han Yu issued a proclamation in which he instructed the crocodiles to leave the area or be killed. The second part of the name derives from the Greek soûkhos meaning crocodile. The species name "sinensis" is a commonly used epithet in taxonomy meaning "from China".
Hanyusuchus was a large, slender snouted crocodilian generally resembling the modern False Gharial. Each premaxilla contained five teeth, followed by sixteen teeth in each maxilla and eighteen in the dentary. The pterygoid bone of Hanyusuchus is occupied by a series of enlarged sinuses thought to be homologous to the enlarged posterior chamber of the pterygoid bulla seen in extant gharials. The structure is however expanded towards the back of the skull in a novel way, increasing the morphological variety of the bulla.
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Tomistoma cairense is an extinct species of gavialoid crocodilian from the Lutetian stage of the Eocene era. It lived in North East Africa, especially Egypt. Remains of T. cairense have been found in the Mokattam Formation, in Mokattam, Egypt. Tomistoma cairense did not have a Maxilla process within their lacrimal gland, whereas all extant (living) crocodilians do.
Eothoracosaurus is an extinct monospecific genus of eusuchian crocodylomorphs found in Eastern United States which existed during the Late Cretaceous period. Eothoracosaurus is considered to belong to an informally named clade called the "thoracosaurs", named after the closely related Thoracosaurus. Thoracosaurs in general were traditionally thought to be related to the modern false gharial, largely because the nasal bones contact the premaxillae, but phylogenetic work starting in the 1990s instead supported affinities within gavialoid exclusive of such forms.