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  1. May 6, 2024 · Venus, she noted, wasn't always such a desert. Scientists suspect that billions of year ago during the formation of Venus, the planet received about as much water as Earth.

  2. Aug 11, 2016 · Venus may have had a shallow liquid-water ocean and habitable surface temperatures for up to 2 billion years of its early history, according to computer modeling of the planet’s ancient climate by scientists at NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) in New York.

    • Rob Garner
  3. Jun 22, 2024 · For the first time, a team of scientists from the University of Colorado Boulder has revealed how the wellspring of water on Venus dried up over time, turning it into a scorching desert.

  4. Sep 22, 2019 · Although many researchers believe that Venus is beyond the inner boundary of our Solar System’s habitable zone and is too close to the Sun to support liquid water, the new study suggests that this might not be the case.

  5. May 6, 2024 · Venus, she noted, wasn't always such a desert. Scientists suspect that billions of year ago during the formation of Venus, the planet received about as much water as Earth.

    • University of Colorado at Boulder
  6. Oct 20, 2021 · The surface of Venus is completely inhospitable for life: barren, dry, crushed under an atmosphere about 90 times the pressure of Earth’s and roasted by temperatures two times hotter than an oven. But was it always that way? Could Venus once have been a twin of Earth – a habitable world with liquid water oceans?

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  8. May 13, 2024 · Today, the atmosphere of our neighbor planet Venus is as hot as a pizza oven and drier than the driest desert on Earth – but it wasn’t always that way. Billions of years ago, Venus had as much water as Earth does today .

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