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No, yeast does not contain egg or egg compounds in it.
It would still be viable but the crack in the egg will probably render it useless for hatching. Cracks in eggs allow bacteria and disease to enter the fertilized eggs and effect the viability. Most cracked eggs do not make it to full hatch.
Eggs are place in little depressions on a motorizes rack that hold the egg upright, with the air space up. The rack tips the eggs all the way right then a hour or so later all the way left. For some larger eggs a different type of rack is used where the eggs lay flat and there are little rollers on a bar that roll the eggs from underneath.
One without a mate? No, the egg needs to be fertilized or the egg would never hatch. Yes, female birds lay eggs on their own but they still need a mate to fertilize the eggs.
you will more than likely still incubate the egg
If an egg is introduced to water that is cooler than the eggs temperature the membrane inside the egg will shrink allowing bacteria to enter.
The sixth person took the basket with the egg in it.
Yes, there is. There are eight eggs to find, so get out there, and quick!
NO! Bacteria in cooked eggs grows quickly!
If properly refridgerated eggs have a shelf life of about 10 weeks.
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.
Eggs were scrambled and they put the eggs in a dehydrator then pulverized to make a powder. They still do it that way unless the egg yolk is removed.