Saturn's moon Rhea may have a breathable atmosphere - io9.com.
I find myself asking if these discoveries of "hospitable" conditions in our solar system are the results of changes that have happened recently, or if we are only now able to discover these things (or are being fed it by TPTB at this point in time.)Saturn's icy moon Rhea has an oxygen and carbon dioxide atmosphere that is very similar to Earth's. Even better, the carbon dioxide suggests there's life - and that possibly humans could breathe the air.
It seems oxygen is far more abundant than we ever suspected, particularly on moons that seem to be completely frozen solid. We recently found evidence of oxygen on Jupiter's moons Europa and Ganymede, and now this finding on [Rhea].
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While the presence oxygen is relatively easy to understand, the carbon dioxide is actually even more intriguing. The gas is likely created by reactions between organic molecules and oxidants down on the moon's surface. (...) This is just further proof that the building blocks and basic prerequisites of life exist all throughout the solar system...