Fertilized chicken eggs still develop into chickens if you remove the shell
22 replies, posted
[video=youtube;am3iGHDnJHc]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=am3iGHDnJHc[/video]
it's not fake: [URL]https://www.jstage.jst.go.jp/article/jpsa/51/3/51_0130043/_pdf[/URL]
I really wish they didn't skip from day ~5 to day 21 without showing any inbetween shots. But very interesting to say the least.
[QUOTE=maurits150;50468073]But very interesting to say the least.[/QUOTE]
Yeah, to say the least. Pretty fucking remarkable.
Must be one hell of a way to come into the world, too. Rather than break through the shell to see your mother (and siblings), you wake up in a goddamn cup.
It makes me wonder; could we devise a similar solution for humans? Like if you took an egg fertilized through IVF, and implanted into some sort of super-enriched "synthetic yolk solution" with enough minerals and proteins and whatnot needed to form a healthy baby. D'you think that you could put it into some sort of ideal incubator, and allow it to gestate that way? Would such a thing even be possible?
Doubtless there'd be a bunch of ethical concerns stemming from growing a baby "ex utero/in vitro", and a lot of wingnuts protesting against the creation of "Macduffs", but if it could be done in a similar fashion to this chicken experiment, that'd be one hell of an industry in the making. I imagine there'd be a fair few women who don't want to experience the madness that swirls when they're with child, or suffer the agony of childbirth (it's part of nature, yes, but it's technically a side-effect), and see this as a viable alternative. Not to mention, folks who couldn't have children naturally would have a new avenue for having kids, without needing a surrogate or making adoptions.
[QUOTE=ironman17;50468169]Yeah, to say the least. Pretty fucking remarkable.
Must be one hell of a way to come into the world, too. Rather than break through the shell to see your mother (and siblings), you wake up in a goddamn cup.
It makes me wonder; could we devise a similar solution for humans? Like if you took an egg fertilized through IVF, and implanted into some sort of super-enriched "synthetic yolk solution" with enough minerals and proteins and whatnot needed to form a healthy baby. D'you think that you could put it into some sort of ideal incubator, and allow it to gestate that way? Would such a thing even be possible?
Doubtless there'd be a bunch of ethical concerns stemming from growing a baby "ex utero/in vitro", and a lot of wingnuts protesting against the creation of "Macduffs", but if it could be done in a similar fashion to this chicken experiment, that'd be one hell of an industry in the making. I imagine there'd be a fair few women who don't want to experience the madness that swirls when they're with child, or suffer the agony of childbirth (it's part of nature, yes, but it's technically a side-effect), and see this as a viable alternative. Not to mention, folks who couldn't have children naturally would have a new avenue for having kids, without needing a surrogate or making adoptions.[/QUOTE]
do you try to write your posts like you're some hot pop scientist or is this natural
[editline]7th June 2016[/editline]
seriously look at every post that guy makes and it reads like a novel or a school essay or some shit its crazy
[highlight](User was banned for this post ("Shitposting/Why Reply?" - Pascall))[/highlight]
[QUOTE=AlienFanatic;50468345]do you try to write your posts like you're some hot pop scientist or is this natural
[editline]7th June 2016[/editline]
seriously look at every post that guy makes and it reads like a novel or a school essay or some shit its crazy[/QUOTE]
There's a good reason his title is "What's brevity?", of course the only polite way to appreciate him gracing us with his posting is not to comment on it directly and have a sensible chuckle.
[QUOTE=AlienFanatic;50468345]do you try to write your posts like you're some hot pop scientist or is this natural
[editline]7th June 2016[/editline]
seriously look at every post that guy makes and it reads like a novel or a school essay or some shit its crazy[/QUOTE]
so wut do u prefer post structure
leik
dis???????
This isn't 4Chan.
[QUOTE=AlienFanatic;50468345]do you try to write your posts like you're some hot pop scientist or is this natural
[editline]7th June 2016[/editline]
seriously look at every post that guy makes and it reads like a novel or a school essay or some shit its crazy[/QUOTE]
Rude.
-snip bad post-
Facepunch: Where threads on chickens growing without shells turn into flaming arguments on grammar.
[QUOTE=maurits150;50468073]I really wish they didn't skip from day ~5 to day 21 without showing any inbetween shots. But very interesting to say the least.[/QUOTE]
day by day shots would be sick
in many ways, actually
[QUOTE=MrJazzy;50468628]Wow maybe you oughta atleast start capitalizing at the beginning of sentences before you start criticizing other people's posts.[/QUOTE]
who the fuck cares lol
gotta get those zingers some how though amiright????
[editline]6th June 2016[/editline]
[QUOTE=ironman17;50468169]
It makes me wonder; could we devise a similar solution for humans? Like if you took an egg fertilized through IVF, and implanted into some sort of super-enriched "synthetic yolk solution" with enough minerals and proteins and whatnot needed to form a healthy baby. D'you think that you could put it into some sort of ideal incubator, and allow it to gestate that way? Would such a thing even be possible?[/QUOTE]
that would be weird as fuck and the next step to cloning tbh
I wasn't being serious, tried to be funny but didn't do so well I'm sorry :v:
i think the next step is to get a full time lapse video of the development. that would be amazing to see
[QUOTE=ironman17;50468169]Yeah, to say the least. Pretty fucking remarkable.
Must be one hell of a way to come into the world, too. Rather than break through the shell to see your mother (and siblings), you wake up in a goddamn cup.
It makes me wonder; could we devise a similar solution for humans? Like if you took an egg fertilized through IVF, and implanted into some sort of super-enriched "synthetic yolk solution" with enough minerals and proteins and whatnot needed to form a healthy baby. D'you think that you could put it into some sort of ideal incubator, and allow it to gestate that way? Would such a thing even be possible?
Doubtless there'd be a bunch of ethical concerns stemming from growing a baby "ex utero/in vitro", and a lot of wingnuts protesting against the creation of "Macduffs", but if it could be done in a similar fashion to this chicken experiment, that'd be one hell of an industry in the making. I imagine there'd be a fair few women who don't want to experience the madness that swirls when they're with child, or suffer the agony of childbirth (it's part of nature, yes, but it's technically a side-effect), and see this as a viable alternative. Not to mention, folks who couldn't have children naturally would have a new avenue for having kids, without needing a surrogate or making adoptions.[/QUOTE]
[url]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_uterus[/url] ?
I thought this was quite commonly known, all the shell does is act as a container as long as the yolk is kept intact it'll develop just the same as it would inside an egg, only major difference is they can grow a lot more freely in an shell-less environment as shown in this video.
ironman17 is a national treasure to be cherished
I bet that chick was really fucking comfortable.
LOOK at all that space it had.
i love the contestants saying "sugoi" in a terrified voice as the fetus Grows Stronger
[QUOTE=ironman17;50468169]Yeah, to say the least. Pretty fucking remarkable.
Must be one hell of a way to come into the world, too. Rather than break through the shell to see your mother (and siblings), you wake up in a goddamn cup.
It makes me wonder; could we devise a similar solution for humans? Like if you took an egg fertilized through IVF, and implanted into some sort of super-enriched "synthetic yolk solution" with enough minerals and proteins and whatnot needed to form a healthy baby. D'you think that you could put it into some sort of ideal incubator, and allow it to gestate that way? Would such a thing even be possible?
Doubtless there'd be a bunch of ethical concerns stemming from growing a baby "ex utero/in vitro", and a lot of wingnuts protesting against the creation of "Macduffs", but if it could be done in a similar fashion to this chicken experiment, that'd be one hell of an industry in the making. I imagine there'd be a fair few women who don't want to experience the madness that swirls when they're with child, or suffer the agony of childbirth (it's part of nature, yes, but it's technically a side-effect), and see this as a viable alternative. Not to mention, folks who couldn't have children naturally would have a new avenue for having kids, without needing a surrogate or making adoptions.[/QUOTE]
Reduces risks to mother's physical and mental health, which is good.
However, being in a real womb effects the fetus' growth in a lot of ways, most of which we don't understand. For example phychological development is influenced by sounds heard at that stage, and hormones from the mother.
So people made that way could turn out quite different.
There's an inner child in me that wants to do this. I wonder if the rooster sperm and the other materials were easily available + a viral how to video on youtube we'd see kids secretly starting to grow chicken in their rooms that would become a social epidemic.
[QUOTE=ironman17;50468169]Yeah, to say the least. Pretty fucking remarkable.
Must be one hell of a way to come into the world, too. Rather than break through the shell to see your mother (and siblings), you wake up in a goddamn cup.
It makes me wonder; could we devise a similar solution for humans? Like if you took an egg fertilized through IVF, and implanted into some sort of super-enriched "synthetic yolk solution" with enough minerals and proteins and whatnot needed to form a healthy baby. D'you think that you could put it into some sort of ideal incubator, and allow it to gestate that way? Would such a thing even be possible?
Doubtless there'd be a bunch of ethical concerns stemming from growing a baby "ex utero/in vitro", and a lot of wingnuts protesting against the creation of "Macduffs", but if it could be done in a similar fashion to this chicken experiment, that'd be one hell of an industry in the making. I imagine there'd be a fair few women who don't want to experience the madness that swirls when they're with child, or suffer the agony of childbirth (it's part of nature, yes, but it's technically a side-effect), and see this as a viable alternative. Not to mention, folks who couldn't have children naturally would have a new avenue for having kids, without needing a surrogate or making adoptions.[/QUOTE]
you stuck a subtle macbeth reference into a post about breeding chicken babies just amazed wow
[QUOTE=ironman17;50468169]Yeah, to say the least. Pretty fucking remarkable.
Must be one hell of a way to come into the world, too. Rather than break through the shell to see your mother (and siblings), you wake up in a goddamn cup.
It makes me wonder; could we devise a similar solution for humans? Like if you took an egg fertilized through IVF, and implanted into some sort of super-enriched "synthetic yolk solution" with enough minerals and proteins and whatnot needed to form a healthy baby. D'you think that you could put it into some sort of ideal incubator, and allow it to gestate that way? Would such a thing even be possible?
Doubtless there'd be a bunch of ethical concerns stemming from growing a baby "ex utero/in vitro", and a lot of wingnuts protesting against the creation of "Macduffs", but if it could be done in a similar fashion to this chicken experiment, that'd be one hell of an industry in the making. I imagine there'd be a fair few women who don't want to experience the madness that swirls when they're with child, or suffer the agony of childbirth (it's part of nature, yes, but it's technically a side-effect), and see this as a viable alternative. Not to mention, folks who couldn't have children naturally would have a new avenue for having kids, without needing a surrogate or making adoptions.[/QUOTE]
I think it's silly to say that this could be done for a human, or any other mammal just because it can be done with a chicken. The process would need to be more complicated because with mammals the embryo gets constant resources from the mother as opposed to other animals that develop in an isolated environment (like an egg).
[QUOTE=maurits150;50468073]I really wish they didn't skip from day ~5 to day 21 without showing any inbetween shots. But very interesting to say the least.[/QUOTE]
Imagine timelapse.
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