The left maxilla (main tooth-bearing bone of the upper jaw) is more complete than the right, and had at least 29 teeth.
It is known from a single specimen, TMM 43681-1, a partial left maxilla (the main tooth-bearing bone of the upper jaw).
It consists of a left maxilla, of which the front end has been broken off.
It consists of a 245 millimetres long right maxilla with six large, up to five centimetres long, teeth, erroneously interpreted by von Meyer as the left maxilla.
H. grandis is known only from Gz 1071, a partial left maxilla, which is hosted at the Warwick County Museum.
The fossil consists of a single partial left maxilla, an upper jaw bone, with seven teeth.
An upper jaw fragment, a left maxilla with three teeth, has been referred to the species.
It consists of a complete left dentary (lower jaw with teeth) and partial left maxilla.
The type species, Zanclodon laevis, is based on a left maxilla that represents an indeterminate archosaurian.
Thus, Jushatyria is known only from its holotype PIN 2867/5, an incomplete left maxilla.