Chicken Incubator
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- News
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Meet Pearl, World's Oldest Chicken Still Defying The Odds
- Tuesday August 19, 2025
- Offbeat | Edited by Abhinav Singh
Pearl's proud owner, Sonya Hull, revealed that she hatched the hen in an incubator at her Little Elm house in Texas on March 13, 2011.
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www.ndtv.com
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As China Overhauls Production, Chickens Need To Lay Billion Eggs A Day
- Monday July 9, 2018
- World News | Reuters
Behind a row of sealed red incubator doors in a new facility in northern China, about 400,000 chicks are hatched every day, part of the rapidly modernising supply chain in China's $37 billion egg industry, the world's biggest.
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www.ndtv.com
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Forget Eggs - 245 Million Years Ago, This Long-Necked Sea Creature Gave Birth To Live Babies
- Wednesday February 15, 2017
- Offbeat | Ben Guarino, The Washington Post
A quarter of a billion years ago, when a shallow sea covered what is now southwest China, a large, long-necked aquatic reptile got pregnant. That is an unusual fact by modern standards - many reptiles, such as birds, turtles and crocodiles, do not get pregnant, which is to say they do not incubate embryos within their bodies and give birth to live ...
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www.ndtv.com
-
Meet Pearl, World's Oldest Chicken Still Defying The Odds
- Tuesday August 19, 2025
- Offbeat | Edited by Abhinav Singh
Pearl's proud owner, Sonya Hull, revealed that she hatched the hen in an incubator at her Little Elm house in Texas on March 13, 2011.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
As China Overhauls Production, Chickens Need To Lay Billion Eggs A Day
- Monday July 9, 2018
- World News | Reuters
Behind a row of sealed red incubator doors in a new facility in northern China, about 400,000 chicks are hatched every day, part of the rapidly modernising supply chain in China's $37 billion egg industry, the world's biggest.
-
www.ndtv.com
-
Forget Eggs - 245 Million Years Ago, This Long-Necked Sea Creature Gave Birth To Live Babies
- Wednesday February 15, 2017
- Offbeat | Ben Guarino, The Washington Post
A quarter of a billion years ago, when a shallow sea covered what is now southwest China, a large, long-necked aquatic reptile got pregnant. That is an unusual fact by modern standards - many reptiles, such as birds, turtles and crocodiles, do not get pregnant, which is to say they do not incubate embryos within their bodies and give birth to live ...
-
www.ndtv.com