“…Aspects of crocodylomorph palaeoneurology were first investigated in the 19th century (Owen, 1842, 1850) and continued sporadically throughout the 20th century (e.g., Colbert, 1946a, 1946b; Edinger, 1938; Hopson, 1979; Yeh, 1958), though the frequency of palaeoneurological publications has increased drastically in the 21st century. With the advent of computed tomography and its increasing widespread availability to researchers, the past 14 years have witnessed a surge in papers that are dedicated either exclusively or partially on the palaeoneurology of crocodylomorphs (e.g., Blanco et al, 2015; Bona & Paulina Carabajal, 2013; Bona et al, 2013, 2017; Bowman et al, 2021; Brusatte, Muir, et al, 2016; Cowgill et al, 2021; Dumont Jr et al, 2020; Erb & Turner, 2021; Fernández et al, 2011; Fonseca et al, 2020; George & Holliday, 2013; Herrera et al, 2018; Herrera, 2015; Holliday & Gardner, 2012; Kley et al, 2010; Leardi et al, 2020; Melstrom et al, 2021; Pierce et al, 2017; Pochat‐Cottilloux et al, 2021; Puértolas‐Pascual et al, 2022; Ristevski et al, 2020a, 2021; Schwab et al, 2020; Schwab, Young, Herrera, et al, 2021, Schwab, Young, Walsh, et al, 2022; Schwab et al, 2022; Sereno & Larsson, 2009; Serrano‐Martínez et al, 2019a, 2019b, 2021; Sertich & O'Connor, 2014; Wilberg et al, 2021; Witmer & Ridgely, 2008; Witmer et al, 2008). Despite this, our understanding of crocodylomorph palaeoneurology is still in its relative infancy considering that the neuroanatomy for the vast majority of crocodylomorph taxa is yet to be investigated, including for the majority of Australian taxa.…”