The Tissot Stone is located near the turtle's head and resembles a weaving shuttle falling from the clouds, hence the name "Tissot". According to folk legend, this stone was thrown by seven fairy maidens when they played with turtle heads, adding a touch of mythological color to it. From a geological perspective, Tissot is not a flying stone, but a typical pictographic stone formed by long-term spherical weathering of gently inclined joints developed in granite. The scattered gravel around it is the remains of two sets of steeply dipping joints intersecting in a northwest and southeast direction, resulting from the collapse of rock blocks and natural transportation. This landscape vividly depicts the evolution of Guifeng Mountain over a long geological period, and is a natural masterpiece that blends mythological imagination with earth science.

