The lichen forms a snow-white, crust-like
thallus that is thick, granular and mealy-looking, and finely cracked, with a thin bordering
hypothallus. Its fruiting bodies (
ascomata) are immersed and usually concealed by the thallus; they tend to become apparent only when the surface is moistened, when irregular outlines can be seen within the white crust. Individual ascomata are about 0.5–1.5 mm long and 0.2–0.3 mm wide, with a moderately thick . The spore-bearing surface () is hidden beneath dense white , but when wet it shows through as reddish brown to almost blackish red. Microscopically, the is not and lacks striations. The
hymenium is clear (not inspersed) and 125–145
μm tall, and it does not stain in iodine tests (I−, KI−); the is distinct, light yellow, and about 10–12.5 μm thick. The
paraphyses branch near their tips, the are short with faint warting, and the
asci contain 4–8 spores. The
ascospores are
hyaline, elongate and tapered at the ends, with 8–10 transverse septa, measuring 35–43 × 7–10 μm, and they are also iodine-negative. No lichen
secondary metabolites were detected by
thin-layer chromatography. ==Habitat and distribution==