“…Chemical mapping using Raman microscopy has long been used to better understand the growth and function of biomineral systems including bones 1 , 2 , teeth 3 , 4 , and, more recently, kidney stones (urinary calculi) 5 – 8 . Compositional and/or structural maps of urinary calculi have been produced using micro computed tomography (µCT) 6 – 15 , fluorescence microscopies 6 – 8 , electron microscopies 6 , 7 , 16 , 17 , optical microscopies 6 – 8 , 18 , multi-photon spectroscopy 19 , infrared microscopy 20 – 22 , and Raman microscopy 5 – 8 . Micro computed tomography allows complete volume imaging of intact stones but has limited voxel resolution of 2–5 µm depending on stone size 14 .…”