then the egg will most likely being moving back and forth as well, especially if the chick is almost ready to be hatched
There will be kind of pocket in the egg which contains enough oxygen for the chick to breathe in the egg for 21 days.
It is the yolk that provides the nutrients for an unhatched chick.
The son of an egg is a chick.
What you see when you crack open an egg is Yolk and albumen, the white and the yellow. This is actually the food for the developing chick when the egg is fertilized and incubated. The chick uses this food for the 21 days it takes to develop. It gets nutrients from the yolk. If you have ever studied the development of an egg you will see what happens. I have seen chicks born out of an incubator with the yolk still attached to their bodies....
The chick grows in the albumen (the white of the egg) and feeds off the yolk.
They keep the egg cratled in the father's feet
The developing chick feeds on the yolk sac, much like the baby of live bearing animals attaches to the placenta. The chick has enough nutrients when born to got 24 hours without beginning on chick starter.
The egg yolk nourishes the chick until it hatches.
A young chick develops inside the egg and can be hatched naturally or through hatcheries. The young chick depends on the egg yolk for nutrients.
The chick egg has much more yolk than the frog egg. A blastopore in frog egg and a premitive groove in chick egg both have the same basic function which is to mark the origin of gastrulation
The yolk of the egg is food stored for the chick during its growth.
The embryo, which in a fertilized egg is a tiny speck attached to the yoke sack.