Tidal heating is thought to maintain large subsurface oceans on several Jovian and Saturnian satellites (Lunine, 2017;Nimmo & Pappalardo, 2016) and these icy ocean worlds are candidates in the search for extraterrestrial life (Domagal-Goldman et al., 2016;Gaidos et al., 1999). Jupiter's moon Europa will be visited by both the Europa Clipper and JUICE missions (Grasset et al., 2013;Pappalardo et al., 2015) because it is of particular interest in this search. The habitability of Europa's interior ocean depends, among other conditions, on the availability of redox gradients (Chyba & Phillips, 2001;Pasek & Greenberg, 2012;Russell et al., 2017). Sufficient oxidant fluxes into the ocean are feasible if oxidants produced by irradiation at the surface (Carlson et al., 1999;Vance et al., 2016) can be transported through the ice shell. While Europa's ice shell is generally thought to be convecting (McKinnon et al., 2016;Pappalardo et al., 1998), it likely has a conductive lid that prevents surface entrainment (Figure 1a). The presence of such a lid is consistent with the limited observational evidence for direct subduction of the irradiated surface (Kattenhorn & Prockter, 2014) and theoretical arguments against subduction (B. Johnson et al., 2017;Howell & Pappalardo, 2019).Another mechanism to connect the surface to the ocean is the breaching of Europa's ice shell by large impacts (Bray et al., 2014;Cox & Bauer, 2015). Although impact breaching may once have been common, there is scant observational evidence for impact-driven oxidant transfer in the last 30-70 Ma (Bierhaus et al., 2009;Steinbrügge et al., 2020;Zahnle et al., 2008). This leaves poorly defined processes of resurfacing or crustal thickening as potential transport mechanisms for oxidants (Greenberg, 2010). Consequently, the oxidant flux into Europa's ocean is currently not understood and presents a major obstacle to assessing its habitability (Hand et al., 2007).