The holotype, housed on display at the Undorov Pleontological Museum, was discovered in 2007 in a layer of the Klimovka Formation in the vicinity of the Slantsevy Rudnik village near Ulyanovsk, European Russia.[3] The holotype was preserved in a mineral crust composed of mainly pyrite, hence the epithet name squalea (the genus is named after Jucha, a girl in Turkic demonology who has snakeskin and can turn into a dragon, having lived for a thousand years, and while caring for his hair, he can take off his head - this is how the lack of a skull in the holotype played a role in the etymology of the genus name).[3] The species Jucha squalea was described in 2020 by Fisher et al.[1]
The holotype consists of 17 cervical vertebrae, 9 dorsal vertebrae and one isolated neural spine, four caudal vertebrae and parts of the forelimbs and hindlimbs.[1]
Description
When fully grown, Jucha grew up to around 5 metres (16 ft) long.[3]
^A. G. Sennikov, M. S. Arkhangelsky (2010). "On a Typical Jurassic Sauropterygian from the Upper Triassic of Wilczek Land (Franz Josef Land, Arctic Russia)". Paleontological Journal. 44 (5): 567–572. Bibcode:2010PalJ...44..567S. doi:10.1134/S0031030110050126. S2CID88505507.