A second species, K. lusiensis, named by Young in 1978 based on IVPP RV 100 and collected at Luxi, Yunnan Province from the Falang Formation, was removed from the genus and is now considered to be related to Lariosaurus.[1]
Etymology
Kwangsisaurus was first described and named by Yang Zhongjian, also known as Chung-Chien Young, in 1965 and the type species is Kwangsisaurus orientalis. The generic name is derived from Kwangsi, an alternative spelling of the former province Guangxi, where the holotype was found, and from Greeksauros, meaning "lizard", a common suffix for genus names of extinct reptile. The specific nameorientalis is Latin for "of the east", as an emphasis on the east-Asian occurrence of Kwangsisaurus whose relatives were known from Europe and the Middle East at the time of its discovery.[2]
^ abOlivier Rieppel (1999). "The sauropterygian genera Chinchenia, Kwangsisaurus, and Sanchiaosaurus from the Lower and Middle Triassic of China". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 19 (2): 321–337. Bibcode:1999JVPal..19..321R. doi:10.1080/02724634.1999.10011144.
^ abcChung-Chien Young (1965). "On the new nothosaurs from Hupeh and Kweichou, China". Vertebrata PalAsiatica. 9 (4): 337–356.