Genus: Inabtanin ROSENBACH, GOODVIN, ALBSHYSH, AZZAM, SMADI, MUSTAFA, ZALMOUT & WILSON MANTILLA, 2024
Etymology: Inabtanin is named for the geomorphological structure near the locality where the specimen was collected, which is called Tal Inab ("grape hill") owing to its prominent coloration. The generic name combines the Arabic, inab, "grape" and tanin, "dragon". Allusions to dragons are common in pterosaur etymology and so tanin was chosen to reflect the Arabic language of Jordan, and because of its similarity to the English word tannin, derived from the French tanin which relates to coloration. The generic name translates to both grape-dragon and grape-colored.
Species: alarabia ROSENBACH, GOODVIN, ALBSHYSH, AZZAM, SMADI, MUSTAFA, ZALMOUT & WILSON MANTILLA, 2024
Etymology: The name alarabia was chosen in reference to the Arabian Peninsula.
Holotype: YUPC-INAB-6-001-010
Locality: Inab-6, located 34 km north of the current border with Saudi Arabia.
Horizon: Muwaqqar Formation.
Biostratigraphy:
Age: Maastrichtian Stage, Late Senonian Subepoch, Late Gulf Epoch, Late Cretaceous.
Material: Upper and lower jaw, 3 cervical vertebrae and a small fragment of a fourth, a left scapulocoracoid, a left humerus, and a nearly complete right wing consisting of a humerus, radius, ulna, metacarpal IV, and first wing phalanx.