The
carapace is considerably depressed, with a prominent mid-line keel, as well as one less pronounced
lateral keel on each side. Its posterior margin is feebly reverted and not or only indistinctly serrated. The nuchal
scute is small. The first vertebral scute is broader in front than behind and larger than the second, third and fourth vertebral shields. These are considerably broader than long, as broad as the costal scutes. The
plastron is sizeable, being nearly as large as the shell opening; it is connected to the carapace by
ligaments and particularly in females there is little
ossification between the shields of the shell. The plastron is angled at the sides and openly emarginate at the forward and aft opening. The width of the plastron bridge is less than the length of the hind lobe; the longest
median suture is between the abdominal scute, the shortest between the gular scute. The axillary and inguinal scutes are very small; one of the latter is even absent. Its head is rather large, with a truncated snout as long as the sizeable
orbit; the upper jaw is hooked, with small
premaxillae. The
mandibular symphysis is very long, exceeding the maximum diameter of the orbit in width. On the hind part of the head, the skin is divided into moderately large shields. The
skull lacks a
temporal arch and has the
frontal bone extended to form a considerable part of the orbit. Seen from above, the
prootic extends towards the front. The
jugal does not contact the small laterally emarginated and medially constricted
pterygoid process, the bones being separated by the maxilla and a gap. The triturating (chewing) surface of the upper jaw is long and narrow, more than four times as long as it is wide. The lower
temporal fossa is large and strongly
concave, providing an attachment for the massive chewing muscle. The forelegs are covered in enlarged squarish or pointed horny scales, particularly on the front. The hindlimbs are rather club-shaped, the
anterior margins and anterior region of their heels bearing enlarged horny scales. The fingers are webbed one-third of their length, while the toes bear rudimentary webbing only. The tail is rather short and becomes very narrow behind the
cloaca in males; it is a mere stub in females. The carapace of the
type specimen was dark bronze; the plastron yellowish with two dark blotches on either side of the bridge. The jaws and upper front part of the head are bright yellow in the living animal, with a red spot on the top of the snout. The hind part of the head and the neck are brown. Limbs and tail are black. The length of the type specimen's shell is 120 mm, its breadth 83 mm and its depth 45 mm. Females are slightly larger than males, but this smallish turtle does not seem to exceed about 13 cm in carapace length even when fully grown. ==Ecology==