T.Rex is an amniote (member of the clade Amniota), just like every other reptile (or mammal), and being a dinosaur it almost certainly laid eggs as well, therefore T.Rex did indeed lay amniotic eggs. In fact, if you want to see a reasonable (if scaled down) approximation of a T.Rex egg, just pick up any chicken egg - chickens, being birds, are members of the clade Coelurosauria (within the suborder Theropoda), and are thus fairly closely related to tyrannosaurs, including T.Rex (in fact, chickens are more closely related to T.Rex than, say, Allosaurus was, even though Allosaurus superficially resembles T.Rex to a far greater degree).
Yes. All dinosaurs had amniotic eggs.
Yes. All dinosaurs had amniotic eggs.
Chicken egg
No.
egg whites
The answer is Amniotic egg.
No. An amniotic egg is a bird or reptile egg, with a shell. Only vertebrates can have amniotic eggs. ^^ By extention, mammals also have amniotic eggs, but they're reduced in placental mammals (live birth). Platypi and echidnas still lay amniotic eggs though.
No. Human females have amniotic fluid inside them when a baby is growing in them.
An amniotic egg is an egg which contains an amnios, a fluid filled membrane that surrounds the embryo to protect it. All reptiles, birds, and mammals produce amniotic eggs during reproduction. Those that give birth to live young, including mammals such as chimpanzees, develop an amniotic egg, although it doesn't have a shell, and retain the egg within the body until the offspring is born.
Amniotic
It swims through the amniotic fluid to the egg.
No. An amniotic egg will normally have multiple parts, like a chicken egg. An aminiotic egg also is surrounded by amniotic fluid. A fish egg is a small embryo surrounded by a protective gel like substance that is similar to a shell.
amniotic
it provides protein to the embryo