The Gnaraloo worm-lizard is a small, slim worm-lizard, with an average
snout–vent length (distance from the tip of the
snout to the end of the opening of the
cloacal slit) of , although it can be between . It has a mean tail length of . It has 162–170
ventral scales and 158–168
vertebral scales, with 12 rows of scales at the mid-body. There are five upper
labial scales, with the first and fourth upper labial scales being fused to the
nasal and
postocular scales, respectively. The body scales are smooth, shiny, and arranged in parallel rows. The narrow head is yellowish-brown with dark brown markings on the sides and on the upper side of the rostral and nasal scales. Some individuals can have strongly marked dark brown heads. The snout is long, narrow, and moderately angular when seen from the side, with a noticeably undershot lower jaw. The eyes are large and located above the third upper labial scale. The body and tail are very thin and round, the latter having a round tip when regenerated. The upper side of the body is yellowish-brown, more uniform in colour towards the front and blending to greyish towards the tail. Brownish streaks extend from behind the head, forming two indistinct lines of brownish streaks and slowly becoming more well-defined, eventually forming multiple lines on the tail. The sides are silvery-grey with dark brown streaks near the edges and middle and are not clearly differentiated from the outermost lines of brownish streaks. The underside of the body and head is heavily marked with dark brown flecks and is darker towards the vent. The underside of the tail is light yellow;
regenerated parts of the tail are greyish and marked with dark brown. When preserved in alcohol, the yellowish-brown of the upperside turns cream and the dark markings on the body and tail become darker and more conspicuous. The Gnaraloo worm-lizard is most similar in appearance to the Hermite Island worm-lizard, from which it differs in having a more slender build, 12 mid-body scale rows, a smaller adult snout–vent length, and lower average ventral and vertebral scale counts. Additionally, the lines formed by brownish streaks on the upper end of the sides are poorly distinguished from the greyish sides in the Gnaraloo worm-lizard, but the streaks and sides are clearly separated by a gap in the Hermite Island worm-lizard. The Gnaraloo worm-lizard is not likely to be confused with any other species of worm-lizards that occur in Western Australia:
A. picturata and
A. smithi have black heads, while
A. inaurita,
A. pulchella, and
A. striolata having blunter, more rounded snouts and a free postocular scale that is not fused to the labial scales. It also shares some important characteristics with
A. haroldi,
A. clairae, and
A. repens, but does not co-occur with any of them and can be told apart from them by a combination of its scalation, size, and coloration. == Distribution and habitat ==