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DVL-0122Specimen Record
AI Reconstruction of Scipionyx samniticus, generated in 2026

Ciro

Scipionyx samniticus

SHIP-ee-oh-niks sam-NIT-ih-kus

Scipionyx is a small theropod dinosaur known from an exceptionally preserved juvenile specimen found in Italy. Nicknamed 'Ciro,' it represents the first dinosaur discovered in Italy and provides remarkable insights into dinosaur soft tissue anatomy, including preserved intestines, muscle fibers, and other internal organs.

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Scipionyx preserves soft tissues including intestines, liver, muscle fibers, and windpipe cartilage—the most complete internal anatomy ever found in a dinosaur

About

Scipionyx samniticus stands as one of the most extraordinary dinosaur discoveries ever made, not for its size—the only known specimen measures just 24 centimeters—but for its unprecedented preservation. This tiny , found in Early Cretaceous limestone deposits near Pietraroja in southern Italy, retained fossilized soft tissues including intestines, liver, muscle fibers, and windpipe cartilage, offering scientists an unparalleled window into dinosaur internal anatomy.

The juvenile specimen, affectionately nicknamed 'Ciro' by the Italian public, belonged to the Compsognathidae family—small, agile predators that flourished during the Jurassic and Cretaceous periods. With its elongated neck, grasping hands bearing sharp claws, and slender legs built for speed, Scipionyx would have been an active hunter of insects, small lizards, and fish in the shallow lagoon environment of what is now the Italian peninsula.

The fossil's discovery by amateur collector Giovanni Todesco in 1981 marked a watershed moment for Italian paleontology, as dinosaur remains had never before been found in the country. When formally described in 1998 by Cristiano Dal Sasso and Marco Signore, the specimen's soft tissue preservation astonished researchers worldwide. Subsequent detailed studies published in 2011 revealed the most complete picture of theropod internal anatomy ever documented, including evidence of the animal's last meal preserved within its digestive tract.

First described1981
Discovered byGiovanni Todesco
Type specimenSBA-SA 163760, Soprintendenza per i Beni Archeologici di Salerno, Avellino e Benevento, Italy