Abstract: In some impact melt (IM) glasses in the shergottites such as EET79001, Shergotty and Tissint, recently showed that secondary mineral assemblages having large sulfur excesses cannot be produced in-situ by impact shock melting of the host rock constituents. Instead, these putative secondary minerals inferred to be present in IM glasses were produced somewhere else in the shergottite source region and were subsequently mobilized into the host rock voids (by lava erosion or aolian activity) prior…