On Sunday, February 14th, 2016 at 11:30 am, Nitrocosm said:
Fascinating. Any traces of such life have long since been destroyed by the enormous pressure and corrosive atmosphere, I would imagine.
If only we could send a probe robust enough to survive long enough to dig up potential fossils...
The thing is, we do not really know what happened on Venus since then. Just because the oceans disappeared and the surface became extremely hot doesn't mean geological activity ended. In fact, there's evidence that something catastrophic may have happened at some point: based on the distribution of impact craters on Venus, it seems that the entire current crust is of a similar age (several hundred million years). In contrast, there are parts of Earth's crust (the old nuclei of continents - or cratons - that are several billion years old) where the impact craters are concentrated. As the oceanic crust gets completely recycled regularly, there's far fewer craters found there. The fact that Venus' surface seems to be of roughly similar age would suggest that there was some kind of global, catastrophic event (perhaps analoguous to the so-called 'flood basalt' events that occured in Earth's history, but on a much larger scale! ) that reshaped the entire surface.