either the egg or the chicken came first. of course, god couldve put an egg on the earth, and it couldve hatched into a chicken, or the chicken couldve came first and hatched an egg...
According to evolutionist theory, the egg came first. This is because the genetic mutation needed to create the chicken would have occurred in the egg before the first chicken hatched.
hhee hi there i have no idea how to poach a chicken but it should be the same as an egg in theory i like dipping my sausage in egg hehehehhehehhee bye see you later
In evolutionary theory, there would have been a species that was almost, but not quite, a chicken. And this would then have had an offspring that was a true chicken. So in this scenario, the egg came first. In Genesis, or the creationist theory, God created all the animals of Earth to be for the use of mankind. They were all created and in place before the arrival of the first man. And so in that scenario, the chicken came first.
The egg. the theory of evolution says that each species continually evolves. each generation shows minor changes. thus even a chicken is evolving and what a chicken looks like today may not be how it originally appeared to be. thus the egg produced the chicken of today.
a chicken egg is about 50g :)
yes because the chicken is inside of the egg.if the chicken wasnt it would be called just an egg
(Answering this from non-religious POV) If you think about it, it would make sense that the egg came first. (All birds are hatched out of eggs) But then that rouses the question, "Well then what incubated the egg?" Then you have the side, "Well, obviously the chicken came first because it could incubate the egg and hatch more chickens" But where did THAT chicken come from? It's one of life's age old questions. As we all know, the chicken (nor the egg) didn't spontaneously generate. (That theory was disproven rather easily) But if I had to give you the easiest answer I would say the chicken. (But then again, it is possible another animal incubated the chicken egg by accident.. Then AGAIN (x3) where did THAT egg come from, hm?)
the egg because dinos lay eggs
seagull's eggs are about the size of an average chicken egg to 2x the size.
According the the theory of evolution, chickens must have evolved from some earlier species, and as a result, the first chicken egg was not laid by a chicken, but by some precursor species. Thus, the egg comes before the chicken. There is, of course, an alternative view. If you prefer a creationist belief system, then God created chickens first, and eggs came afterwards.
The Egg * The egg came first because other animals came before the chicken that had eggs of some kind. * One kind are the fish in the seas; fish lay eggs. Another are snakes; snakes also lay eggs. * Only if this question was asked as, "Which came first, the chicken or the chicken egg?", would it be a paradox. * Sexually reproducing animals also have eggs- the question doesn't specify a type of egg. * Dinosaurs had eggs. * Darwin's theory; the chicken egg came from a different species. * A chicken could not have its genetic material altered during life, so the egg must have evolved and been first. * If you take into account the doctrine of evolution, the egg's coming first becomes plausible on the cellular level under perfect circumstances (abundant food and resources). There will be an a-sexual reproduction once the environment becomes unfavorable. The species would then evolve, and a lot of animals have no parental instincts but through evolution some have started to look after their young. * An a-sexual reproduction is reproduction in which there is no fusion of male and female sex cells gametes. * The egg came first because the chicken descended from a dinosaur, and it laid an egg that was changed from Darwin's theory. * The egg came first because a chicken comes from an egg. At whatever point you decide to call the chicken a true chicken, it must have come from an egg. Because the different species before it must have evolved to make a chicken, the egg came first.
From an evolutionist's point of view, the egg came first. A chicken, by definition, must be born from an egg. The egg does not have to be a chicken's egg however. The egg could be layed by an avian that is very similar to a chicken, but which is not a chicken. A small mutation in the genes produces the chicken offspring, which in turn lays eggs to produce more young.