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Abstract

When studying the topographic features of a specimen, the microscopist has several useful software tools available. Qualitative stereomicroscopy provides a composite view from two images of the same area, prepared with different tilts relative to the optic axis, that gives a visual sensation of the specimen topography, as shown for a fractured galena crystal using the anaglyph method in Fig. 15.1 (software: Anaglyph Maker). The “3D Viewer” plugin in ImageJ-Fiji can take the same members of the stereo pair and render the three-dimensional surface, as shown in Fig. 15.2, which can then be rotated to “view” the surface from different orientations (Fig. 15.3).

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Goldstein, J.I., Newbury, D.E., Michael, J.R., Ritchie, N.W.M., Scott, J.H.J., Joy, D.C. (2018). SEM Case Studies. In: Scanning Electron Microscopy and X-Ray Microanalysis. Springer, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-6676-9_15

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