Remains attributed to the species are generally around the size of the livingdwarf cassowary. Remains attributed to C. lydekkeri differ from living cassowaries in a number of morphological characters, including "a shallower, narrower pelvis, more gracile femur and a narrower proximal end to the tarsometatarsus".
Taxonomy
The species was originally described by Walter Rothschild based on a partial right tibiotarsus of probablePleistocene age. The exact provenance is unknown, and was originally reported as coming from cavedeposits near Wellington in New South Wales, though this is now considered unlikely. It has alternatively been proposed that it may originate from the Darling Downs in Queensland based on its preservation. Other remains attributed to C. lydekkeri have been reported from the Pliocene and Pleistocene of Australia and New Guinea, including a skeleton from bog deposits near Pureni the central highlands of Papua New Guinea, dating to the Late Pleistocene. The taxonomy of the species has been described as "problematic", and it has been said that there "is no indication of close affinity between these fossil forms and living cassowaries", and it has been suggested that all living cassowaries are more closely related to each other than to forms attributed to C. lydekkeri.