Bonelli, LetiziaMagin, Elisabeth MariaRiel, Sjoerd vanCampana, StefanoFerdani, DanieleGraf, HolgerGuidi, GabrieleHegarty, ZackaryPescarin, SofiaRemondino, Fabio2025-09-052025-09-052025978-3-03868-277-6https://doi.org/10.2312/dh.20253074https://diglib.eg.org/handle/10.2312/dh20253074This poster aims to discuss the limitations and benefits of different imaging techniques when capturing fine inscriptions on objects made of bone, wood and leather, with the explicit goal of producing models suitable for scientific study. The case study is conducted on a corpus of approximately 60 runic inscriptions from medieval Oslo, dating between the 11th and 13th centuries and will be published through the museums existing online web interfaces, Unimusportalen, and BItFROST.Attribution 4.0 International LicenseCCS Concepts Applied computing → Physical sciences and engineering → ArchaeologyCCS Concepts Applied computing → Physical sciences and engineering → ArchaeologyCombining Different Techniques for Documenting Medieval Runic Inscriptions10.2312/dh.202530742 pages