Yellow 5 is tartrazine - it is a manufactured (rather than natural) dye used in many foods, though less so in recent years. There is never a 101% gurantee about the feedstock used for manufacturing anything, but it is normally made from petroleum.
no
Yellow 5 does not contain oil from pigs. It is a purely synthetic chemical used for food colouring. Its chemical formula is C16H9N4Na3O9S2 . For more information see Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tartrazine
4 or 5$
yellow 5 is pork and yellow 6 and yellow 5 lake are not pork
The average lifespan of a guinea pig is 5 to 7 years. The yellow butts are probably just the color of their urine on their fur. Male guinea pigs may have a yellow waxy area above their backsides where a tail would be ( if they had a tail). This is their scent gland and the yellow waxy substance is normal. If the fur is dirty with faeces or if the area is excessively matted then you can clean it gently with a small animal shampoo and warm water. (make sure your pig is completely dry before he goes home though, you don't want him to catch a cold!)
5
a mini-farm...
You need to find another chemist. Yellow #5 (Tartarzine) and Red #40 are made from petroleum. <Yellow 5 does carry Oil from the pigs! I was talking to a chemist and farmist online they told me when they slaughter a pig they keep his skin for pig oil for the food ing. Yellow no.5. Anyways anyone that is wondering about yellow 5 it does have pig oil which is known to Muslims HARM TO EAT! So please to everyone out there do not eat yellow #5 if your Muslim. I am also Muslim. I work with chemist but I finally heard from a farmist. A farmist was the person that gave me a lot of details. He told me it has pig oil but no pig meat. I told him about other yellow's but he only told me 3 and non were pig oil other than yellow 5. I told you Muslims. Now you know the truth becareful. Red no. 40 / red #40 has gelatin in it. I learned from chemist. But I don't mess with it because its harm to mess with it.>
Film Pigs - 2012 Punchy Pigs 1-10 was released on: USA: 5 October 2012
The best age to breed your guinea-pigs is 5 months to a year old.
gineua pigs
They ten to have 1-5 baby's I have guniea Pigs of my own and they just had a litter of 4 so it all depends on your guniea pigs