The stone is located about 0.15 km northwest of the confluence of the Neris and Sukra rivers, about 80 m northwest of the Vievis–Žasliai road bridge over Sukra. The stone is made of gray granite, covered with moss. The stone is 1.95 m long, 1.6 m wide and up to 0.3 m high from the current ground surface. In the western part of the stone there are natural depressions called feet. The largest depression resembles the imprint of a human right foot, called the foot of the Mother of God (Holy Mother, Man). It is 39 cm long, 4–10 cm wide and up to 6 cm deep. Next to it is a depression 36 cm long, 8–15 cm wide and up to 5 cm deep, called the foot of Christ, or the foot of the baby (Christ, a small child). Next to them is a small depression called the foot of the lamb. The depression is somewhat elongated, 8×5 cm in size, up to 2.5 cm deep. The stone is considered sacred, miraculous. Offerings were placed on the stone: money, rings, beads, flowers, etc. A wooden cross stands to the south of the stone. Masses have been held at this place since the 19th century. In 1935, there was an offering box near the stone, and the collected offerings were given to the parish priest. On the tenth Friday after Easter, people from the mass with the whole procession would come to the stone to pray, walking along the paths around it. Many legends are known about the stone. It is said that when the stones were soft, Mary and Jesus Christ walked on the ground and stamped their feet in the stone. Another legend tells that the Mitkiškės stone is located on the site of a church that once stood. While building a water mill on the Sukra stream, an attempt was made to break the stone, but as soon as the stonemason started working, he went blind, and blood began to flow from the stone. There are many variations of legends about the miraculous power of the stone, and people who came to it were healed. In 1971, it was explored by the Institute of History, the stone was repeatedly examined in 1975 and 1984. In 1998, the State Monument Protection Commission approved that this stone be included in the Register of Immovable Cultural Properties of the Republic of Lithuania. The stone is a mythological monument of national significance, protected by the state. Currently, it is not difficult to find this stone. The trees growing around the stone and the cross standing next to it are clearly visible from the road. The old cross has been replaced with a new one, a boxwood hedge has grown instead of the former wooden fence, a considerable layer of soil has been excavated around the stone, and the environment is constantly maintained.