The old house was located 20-minute drive from the current Kaviyangan village and close to the summit of Nandawushan, Pingtung County.
[6] With a traditional Paiwan wedding, it would symbolise the tribe marrying away the pillar as a bride to the university.
Bas-relief and line carving techniques were used to present a full-body standing figure of a woman, with her hands held together and flat on her chest.
Her fingers, wrists, arms, and lower legs were sculpted with multiple circles of parallel carving patterns, which can be inferred to be of noble origin.
This "daughter" pillar was also listed as a national treasure and is currently at Biodiversity Research Museum, Academia Sinica.