The holotype, discovered in 1919 by M. Finestres in Laure-Minervois and previously housed at the Société d'Etudes Scientifiques de l'Aude,[1] is an anterior portion of a mandible which is now lost,[1] and MHNT.PAL.2012.0.49, a partial skull from a different specimen is also known, which was donated to the History Museum of Toulouse in 1873 by Henri de Sévérac;[2] MHNT.PAL.2012.0.49 has since been partially prepared at sometime between 1931 and 17 April 2016.[1]
The type species, A. glareae, was named and described by Gaston Astre in 1931.[3] A snout fragment from the History Museum of Tolouse was also described by Astre (1931),[3] but can not be identified further than cf.Atacisaurus.[1]
A second nominal species of this genus, Atacisaurus crassiproratus, was reclassified as a sebecosuchian in the 1990s, listed as cf. Iberosuchus by Ortega et al. (1996)[2] before being recognized as distinct from Iberosuchus by Martin et al. (2023) and renamed Dentaneosuchus.[4]
Although currently classified within Gavialidae,[4]Atacisaurus has been suggested to have tentatively belonged within Tomistominae due to its resemblance to Megadontosuchus.[10][11]
^ abOrtega, F.; Buscaloni, A.D; Gasaparini, Z. (1996). "Reinterpretation and new denomination of Atacisaurus crassiproratus (Middle Eocene; Issel, France) as cf. Iberosuchus (Crocodylomorpha, Metasuchia)". Geobios. 29 (3): 353–364. Bibcode:1996Geobi..29..353O. doi:10.1016/S0016-6995(96)80037-4.
^ abAstre, G. (1931). "Les crocodiliens fossiles des terrains tertiaires sous pyrénéens". Bulletin de la Société d'Histoire naturelle de Toulouse. 61: 25–71.
^ abMartin, J. E.; Pochat-Cottilloux, Y.; Laurent, Y.; Perrier, V.; Robert, E.; Antoine, P.-O. (2023). "Anatomy and phylogeny of an exceptionally large sebecid (Crocodylomorpha) from the middle Eocene of southern France". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 42 (4). e2193828. doi:10.1080/02724634.2023.2193828. S2CID258361595.
^Romer, A. S. (1956). Osteology of Reptiles. Chicago: University of Chicago Press
^Kuhn, O. (1968) Die vorzeitlichen Krokodile. Munich: Oeben, Krailling bei München.
^Berg, D. E. (1966) Die Krokodile, insbesondere Asiatosuchus und aff. Sebecus?, aus dem Eozän von Messel bei Darmstadt/Hessen. Abhandlungen des Hessischen Landesamtes für Bodenforschung 52:1-105.
^Jouve, S. (2004). Etude des Crocodyliformes fini Crétacé-Paléogène du Bassin des Oulad Abdoun (Maroc) et comparaison avec les faunes africaines contemporaines: systématique, phylogénie et paléobiogéographie. Unpublished Ph.D. Dissertation. Paris: Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle, 651
pp.
^Vasse, D. (1992).Les crocodiles de l'Aude: aperçu du matériel connu et présentation de quelques nouvelles pièces. Bulletin de la Société d'Etudes Scientifiques de l'Aude. 92: 37–41.
^Brochu, C. A. (2013). Phylogenetic relationships of Palaeogene ziphodont eusuchians and the status of Pristichampsus Gervais, 1853. Earth and Environmental Science Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 103: 521–550.