“…Calcium or magnesium sulfides are most commonly-cited as candidates for the relatively volatile substance [Blewett et al, 2011[Blewett et al, , 2013Helbert et al, 2012], on the basis of the high concentration of sulfur detected at Mercury's surface [Nittler et al, 2011;Evans et al, 2012], expectations for mineralogy under Mercury's highly reducing conditions [Burbine et al, 2002], and correlations between sulfur, calcium and magnesium abundance in heavily-cratered terrains [Weider et al, 2015]. This hypothesis has recently gained further support from observations of anomalously high exospheric calcium above the extensively-hollowed Tyagaraja crater [Bennett et al, 2016]. Laboratory experiments with magnesium, calcium and manganese sulfides do indicate that sulfides can be volatilized at the daytime temperatures experienced at Mercury's surface, and that extreme thermal cycling on the planet's surface could account for the lack of characteristic absorption bands [Helbert et al, , 2013], but have not provided a spectral match to BCFDs, LRM, or indeed any surface unit on Mercury [Blewett et al, 2013;Izenberg et al, 2014].…”