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schwartzworld | 4 months ago

The best time to start terraforming a planet is 500 years ago. The second best time is now.

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SideburnsOfDoom|4 months ago

> The best time to start terraforming a planet is 500 years ago.

For context, it took an estimated three-quarters of a billion years to oxygenate Earth's atmosphere. Even a speed-run of that is ... considerably longer than a few centuries.

source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Great_Oxidation_Event

(to be fair, Mars is quite rusty already, it has a head start on the Early Earth in that regard)

weregiraffe|4 months ago

The best time to start terraforming a planet is never. The idea is as absurd as a Dyson sphere/swarm. People should really grow beyond sci-fi ideas that were last fresh in the 1930's.

ACCount37|4 months ago

No. Sci-fi ideas from the 1930s beat the myopic doomerism of 2020s, and it's not even a contest.

glenstein|4 months ago

To your point, one of the most remarkable things I've read about both Mars and Venus, is that there was a time billions of years ago when they had more moderate temperatures and liquid water.

In a way, it's a tragedy that human civilization has only emerged at a time when both Mars and Venus have become much more uninhabitable than they used to be.

ASalazarMX|4 months ago

Probably because the period where the three (or even Earth and another) of them were inhabitable enough to sustain a technological civilization was very small, if it happened at all.

pfannkuchen|4 months ago

Or we cycle through them and forget every time.