Sankofa eggs are uniformly 7 cm long and 4 cm wide, and their eggshell averages 0.27 mm thick. The eggshell consists of two layers, the prismatic (or palisade) layer and the mammillary layer, similar to most other non-avian dinosaur eggshells. In
Sankofa, these two layers have a gradual boundary, and the mammillary layer is much thinner than the prismatic. The prismatic has a slightly squamatic microstructure, very similar to the eggs of
Troodon and other
prismatoolithids, a step towards the fully squamatic texture of bird eggs. The eggshell has a smooth surface with no trace of ornamentation, and highly variable pore density. The most significant characteristic of
Sankofa is its shape: they are asymmetric, with an ovoid shape, like bird eggs. A morphometric analysis by
López-Martínez and Vicens in 2012 found that it was an intermediate shape between avian and non-avian theropods, and also very similar to an
enantiornithine egg from the
Bajo de la Carpa Formation in
Argentina, though their microstructures are quite different. ==Classification==