The buttercup lucine grows to a length of up to . It has a pair of equal sized, nearly circular, inflated
valves joined at a many-toothed
hinge. The exterior is smooth and white and is etched with fine concentric lines running parallel with the margin which show the animal's annual growth stages. The interior of the valves is
buttercup yellow. When examining an empty valve, the
pallial line (formed by the attachment of the
mantle muscles) can be seen running parallel with the margin with the two muscle scars nearer the hinge. These show where the strong
adductor muscles that held the valves together were attached. The anterior scar (nearer the animal's head) is parallel with the pallial line, a fact that distinguishes this species from the otherwise similar chalky buttercup (
Anodontia philippiana). ==Distribution and habitat==