Dinosaurs, like many reptiles today, buried their eggs in warm soil or in piles of decomposing vegetation. Dinosurs did not sit on a nest like birds. The heat from the soil or decomposition incubated the eggs and the embryos matured. Some scientists think the mother dinosaur stayed close to the nest to protect the eggs or adjust the rotting vegetation to provide a correct temperature. At some point in their development the embryos broke out of the eggs, like chicks do, and started off on their own.
Wanting to sit on and hatch eggs.
Yes they will but it is a lower chance that they will hatch.
it left it to hatch alone
How often does a White Pekin duck have to sit on her eggs during the day for them to eventually hatch
Where ever the hell he wants
they leave them to hatch alone
Yes. Kookaburras incubate their eggs by sitting on them. Both the male and female sit on the eggs, sharing their incubation duties.
They left the eggs alone
Yes, like all birds, the eggs must be incubated to hatch.
No, absolutely not. Hens sit on their eggs until they hatch. They actually nestle their feathers above and around the eggs and keep them warm, but people say they are sitting or setting on their eggs.
Plovers typically sit on their eggs for about 25-30 days before they hatch. During this time, the adult plovers take turns incubating the eggs to keep them warm and protected until they hatch.
Probably not, and if chicks hatch in winter, they'll get cold without protection. It's best to hatch eggs in the spring.