I Was Interviewed by New Scientist About Our New Paper in GRL on Venus Climate History
“Venus could have been habitable while life evolved on Earth”
This story describes a publication in Geophysical Research Letters on which I was co-author.
The punch line is that Venus may have been a habitable planet for much longer than we thought – possibly for most of its history!!
“It’s one of the big mysteries about Venus. How did it get so different from Earth when it seems likely to have started so similarly?” says David Grinspoon at the Planetary Science Institute in Tucson, Arizona. “The question becomes richer when you consider astrobiology, the possibility that Venus and Earth were very similar during the time of the origin of life on Earth.” – Aviva Rutkin, New Scientist
David was interviewed by the Washington Post on THE OSIRIS-REx mission, asteroid impacts, future survival, and his new book, EARTH IN HUMAN HANDS. Check out the video by clicking here!
Watch David’s talk called, “Cognitive Planetary Transitions: An Astrobiological Perspective on the Sapiezoic Eon” from the Big History Anthropocene Conference, at The Macquarie University in Australia.
How long will humans last? David discusses the the question of when the Anthropocene will end in an article in Scientific American’s The Future issue.
In a new publication in the Geophysical Research Letters, David et al examines if Venus could have been the first habitable world in our solar system. Read the article here!
You can pre-order David’s new book, Earth in Human Hands, NOW!!! Click me!
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