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Old May 18th 06, 12:19 PM posted to sci.astro,sci.astro.amateur,rec.arts.sf.written,sci.physics
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Default suppose earth and venus switched places. will venus produce life?

In article ,
Jasper Janssen wrote:
On Sun, 14 May 2006 22:08:08 -0700 (PDT), (Brian Tung)
wrote:

Dorothy J Heydt wrote:
No. Venus's atmosphere is way the heck too thick, and a reducing
atmosphere besides.


It's thick now. It's far from certain that it was thick to begin with.
Carbon dioxide may well have outgassed from rocks as the heat began to
build. In other words, it may have been a case of positive feedback.


It doesn't really matter where it came from, all that matters is that it's
there, and if you switch planets around you'll have to deal with it.


And men would have to go two orbits over to meet women.

/BAH