Abstrakt: |
The laser scanning (TLS) of historical monuments brings some interesting issues and particularities in the digital documentation of built cultural heritage, with an increasing need to establish a working standard and specific useful outputs for the use of data in conservation and restoration efforts. Our approach here, in this second part of the article, is to present a few ideas on how to better organize and perform a TLS scan, from planning to certain issues that can arise during the documentation phase. Resolution, accuracy, and quality management issues are being brought into discussion, as well as the need for internal and external references in order to maintain the high level of quality required by the documentation of built cultural heritage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |