The Apterostigma eowilsoni specimen is well preserved with an estimated Weber's length of 1.44 millimetres (0.057 in) and a head length of 0.99 millimetres (0.039 in). The body has a fine covering of simple, upright setae which reach a total length of 0.15 millimetres (0.0059 in). The occiput, the rear area of the head capsule, is short, not forming a neck like that seen in A. electropilosum. The integument of the collar is rugose, with longitudinal stria. The antennae are composed of eleven segments, in which the tip segment is 2.25 times the length of the next segment.[2] The eyes are rounded and bulbous in structure, with a circumference of twelve ommatidia. The bulbous eyes have a half hemisphere structure with ommatidia on the sides and front, while the rear sides are integument. The head capsule shows a smooth and shiny clypeus, a feature seen in the living pilosum group of Apterostigma species. However, the front edge of the clypeus is notably reduced, nearing the absent clypeus border that is a character of the "auriculatum" group. The clypeus structure is most similar to an undescribed pilosum group species collected in Costa Rica, while the eye structure is closest to a "auriculatum" group species A. pariense and A. reburrum. Given the ocular structure, A. eowilsoni is likely to have had excellent stereoscopic vision but poor side vision and been blind in the rear.[2]