1. "Indraloris " is known from isolated teeth and fragmentary lower jaws. 2. The lower molar of " Indraloris " is known from four specimens. 3. "Indraloris " molars are short and organized in two main lophs ( lobes ). 4. Gingerich and Sahni considered both " Indraloris " and " Sivaladapis " to be adapids. 5. Tattersall, who also described additional material of " Indraloris ", continued to regard the animal as a lorisid. 6. YGSP 32152, a very worn m1 in a piece of jaw, represents the unnamed large " Indraloris ". 7. Also in 1979, Frederick Szalay and Eric Delson placed " Indraloris " in its own tribe, Indralorisini, within Adapidae. 8. The mandible is best represented by YGSP 32727, one of two specimens of the unnamed large species of " Indraloris ". 9. In addition, they suggested that two lower jaw fragments from the Kamlial Formation represented a third, larger species of " Indraloris ". 10. The only known upper tooth of " Indraloris " is an M3, YGSP 46009 . It is broken at the back labial corner.