Article contentIn a classic sci-fi plot twist, they spent years looking for life on Mars and Zontar snuck up on them instead. Try refreshing your browser, or John Robson: The answers aren't out there, despite what sci-fi fans believe Back to videoNow we know, at least if we once had plastic Apollo 11 moon lander models, that phosphine is … no. In mythology Venus is Aphrodite, described in the Percy Jackson series as … no, we can’t print it. Whereas the Venus described in Tuesday’s National Post comes close to being unprintable for the opposite reason. It starts with “harshly acidic clouds” and quickly spirals down to a surface “hot enough to melt lead … covered with craters, volcanoes, mountains and large-scale lava plains.”
Source: National Post September 16, 2020 10:07 UTC