TY - JOUR
T1 - Crossing scales and eras
T2 - Correlative multimodal microscopy heritage studies
AU - Wood, Charles
AU - Deakin, George
AU - Moayedi, Atousa
AU - Radulovic, Jovana
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s). Journal of Microscopy published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Royal Microscopical Society.
PY - 2025/9/12
Y1 - 2025/9/12
N2 - The comprehensive characterisation of complex, irreplaceable cultural heritage artefacts presents significant challenges for traditional analytical methods, which can fall short in providing multi-scale, non-invasive analysis. Correlative Multimodal Microscopy (CoMic), an approach that integrates data from multiple techniques, offers a powerful solution by bridging structural, chemical, and topographical information across different length scales. This paper provides a comprehensive review of the evolution, current applications, and future trajectory of CoMic within the field of heritage science. We present a historical overview of microscopy in heritage studies and detail the principles and advances of key techniques, such as electron, X-ray, optical, and probe microscopies. This review presents practical applications through case studies on materials that include wood, pigments, ceramics, metals, and textiles. To aid CoMic uptake, we also provide user-centric guides for researchers with diverse expertise. This review also examines the challenges that currently limit the widespread adoption of CoMic, challenges that include sample preparation, data correlation accuracy, high instrumental and resource costs, and the need for specialised interdisciplinary expertise. Although CoMic is a transformative methodology for artefact analysis and conservation, its full potential will be realised through future developments in accessible instrumentation, standardised protocols, and the integration of AI-driven data analysis. This review serves as a critical resource and roadmap for researchers, conservators, and institutions looking to harness the power of correlative microscopy to preserve our shared cultural legacy.
AB - The comprehensive characterisation of complex, irreplaceable cultural heritage artefacts presents significant challenges for traditional analytical methods, which can fall short in providing multi-scale, non-invasive analysis. Correlative Multimodal Microscopy (CoMic), an approach that integrates data from multiple techniques, offers a powerful solution by bridging structural, chemical, and topographical information across different length scales. This paper provides a comprehensive review of the evolution, current applications, and future trajectory of CoMic within the field of heritage science. We present a historical overview of microscopy in heritage studies and detail the principles and advances of key techniques, such as electron, X-ray, optical, and probe microscopies. This review presents practical applications through case studies on materials that include wood, pigments, ceramics, metals, and textiles. To aid CoMic uptake, we also provide user-centric guides for researchers with diverse expertise. This review also examines the challenges that currently limit the widespread adoption of CoMic, challenges that include sample preparation, data correlation accuracy, high instrumental and resource costs, and the need for specialised interdisciplinary expertise. Although CoMic is a transformative methodology for artefact analysis and conservation, its full potential will be realised through future developments in accessible instrumentation, standardised protocols, and the integration of AI-driven data analysis. This review serves as a critical resource and roadmap for researchers, conservators, and institutions looking to harness the power of correlative microscopy to preserve our shared cultural legacy.
KW - artefact analysis
KW - conservation science
KW - correlative multimodal microscopy (CoMic)
KW - cultural heritage
KW - electron microscopy
KW - non-destructive analysis
KW - X-ray microscopy
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105016162358
U2 - 10.1111/jmi.70030
DO - 10.1111/jmi.70030
M3 - Article
C2 - 40937885
AN - SCOPUS:105016162358
SN - 0022-2720
JO - Journal of Microscopy
JF - Journal of Microscopy
ER -