The lichen has a pale mineral-gray
thallus (the main lichen body) that is often partly immersed in the substrate, and it can be edged by a narrow black line of (a dark marginal zone of fungal tissue) up to 0.2 mm wide. Its
perithecia (flask-shaped
fruiting bodies) sit directly on the surface as smooth, hemispherical to barrel-shaped structures about 0.2–0.4 mm across. They are pale cream to gray and glossy, becoming brownish gray toward the top, and each has a depressed black
ostiole (opening); in cross section, the ostiole appears as a black cap set slightly below the perithecial apex. Microscopically, the tissue between the
asci (the ) is not oil-filled (remains clear), and its filaments can be partly branched. Each ascus contains four
hyaline (colorless) spores that are fusiform and densely (divided by multiple cross-walls and lengthwise walls), with 7–9 transverse
septa and 1–3 longitudinal septa, some of them oblique; the spores measure about 40–50 × 12–15 μm. In the original description, this combination of muriform spores and unadorned perithecia was treated as distinctive within
Aspidothelium. The authors said it most closely resembles
Aspidothelium geminiparum, but that species has spores divided only by cross-walls (not also by lengthwise walls). They also noted it could be mistaken for
Thelenella paraguayensis; however, that species hides its
perithecia in wart-like bumps of the thallus and has a branching network of
hyphae between the
asci that often join, along with spores that have rounder ends. ==Habitat and distribution==