Yes
The iroquois did eat wild turkey
Birds rabbits roots eggs deer turkey and hickory nuts dinosoars
Bison, deer, fish, grouse, eggs, wild cherries, wild turnips, wild turkey, a variety of wild plants. Because of their nomadic nature, they had little if any agriculture.
Sometimes
You can cook them and eat them.
at least one
No, a vulture would not kill a raccoon. However, vultures are scavengers and would eat a dead raccoon.
Wild mice like bologna.
Question does not make sense
Wild turkeys eat acorns, seeds, small insects, wild berries and grass.
Depending on where you keep the egg because they may wrotting but most turkeys lye on thier eggs immediately the finish laying the eggs
Yes. The eggs of a turkey are stronger flavored and richer than chicken eggs. They often have a distinct "wild" flavor and can sometime taste of pine/cedar if gathered from the wild. Domestic turkey eggs do not usually have a bad flavor but they are distinctly different than the egg of a chicken.