Mars doesn't have a magnetic field, or at least one which is of any use. Any sizeable atmos on Mars would get blown off by solar storms. Just like that last one it had.
It would be much cheaper and faster to build O'Neill colonies - and they would have other advantages: no delta V (as opposed to a planet), increased confort, potential economic prosperity (from surface mining asteroids, as opposed to burrowing the ground on a planet for resources).
It doesn't seem to be a problem that if it takes 'a hundred thousand years' (your arbitrary measurement) to strip a planet's atmos then it's highly likely that it will take that amount of time to build it up in the first place.
As to magnetic fields - Mars is too light to hold on to any atmosphere without a magnetic field, Venus isn't but any useful atmosphere has been stripped.
It would be much cheaper and faster to build O'Neill colonies - and they would have other advantages: no delta V (as opposed to a planet), increased confort, potential economic prosperity (from surface mining asteroids, as opposed to burrowing the ground on a planet for resources).
I'm guessing that when you say no delta V, you mean there's no significant gravity field for a ship to escape?
I'm not sure that O'Neill colonies are as attractive an option as you think they are. They don't really create any of their own resources, you're having to ship all the required materials from Earth to construct them (though asteroid and comet mining mitigates this somewhat). They're totally unshielded by their environment from natural disasters, though surface colonies might have to contend with severe weather conditions.
There might be some things I'm missing out in terms of their advantages though, besides their mobility and near lack of delta V required for leaving them.
Don't be silly. As far as Mars is concerned the combination of the core cooling and hardening weakened the magnetic field and combined with its lower mass finished off the atmosphere. Earth is only just big enough to hang on to its atmos.
You might have all the raw materials in asteroids but you're still going to need a blast furnace, a foundry, a strip mill and a manufacturing plant at the very least. How are you supposed to make those in space without shipping them up from Earth?
It sounds to me like you're just making that up.
I don't think terraforming is likely under any circumstances in this solar system or anywhere else. It's much more likely that 'habitable' will mean 'able to walk around without a pressure suit', when it comes to suitable planets.
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