“…Impact melt rocks with compositions broadly similar to those of the felsic Hiawatha melt grains have been described from, e.g., the New Quebec crater, Canada (Grieve et al, 1991); the Popigai crater, Siberia (Whitehead et al, 2002); the Ries crater (Osinski, 2003(Osinski, , 2005; the El'gygytgyn impact structure, Russia (Gurov and Koeberl, 2004); the Chesapeake Bay impact structure, USA (Belkin and Horton, 2009); and the Bosumtwi crater, Ghana (Välja et al, 2019). Unaltered impact glasses are generally very dry, with H 2 O contents below 0.1 wt% (Beran and Koeberl, 1997), and the melt rocks from most craters consist of pure glass or glass with scattered prismatic microlites like in Hiawatha grain 21K-w39.…”