Egyptian
Kushite culture was influenced by Egyptian culture
No. The Mesopotamian Blue is an made-up breed of cat in Dave Mckean's successful Varjak Paw books. The cats in the illustrations resemble Russian Blues.
The Golden Calf resembled the god Apis.
Any of various structures, such as the external ear, that resemble a shell in shape.
flagella
Yes, some species of moss produce reproductive structures known as sporophytes, which can resemble cones. These structures contain spores that allow the moss to reproduce.
These structures are called vestigial structures. They are remnants of ancestral features that no longer serve a clear purpose in the organism's current form. Examples include the human appendix and whale leg bones.
Probably Velvet Mites. Not harmful to structures or humans.
The mummy 'Imhotep' was supposed to resemble Seti II. But Boris Karloff (who played the Mummy) looked nothing like the mummy of Seti II in the film. Instead he bore a resemblance to the mummy of Ramesses III.
The Egyptian predynastic culture was beginning to resemble the Pharaonic ages from around 5,500 BCE. Organized, permanent settlements existed, based around agriculture, and the archetypal characteristics of Egyptian civilization were appearing. Artefacts of stone were being supplemented by those of metal, and pottery, basketry, weaving, and the tanning of animal hides were part of daily life. However, the answer to "When did civilization begin?" depends on our definition of civilization. Primitive civilizations already existed long before this Egyptian predynastic period. The world's oldest known pottery was made 12,000 years ago by the Jomon people of Kyushu, Japan.
Some Indus seals feature figures that resemble the Hindu deities Shiva and Skanda. Fire altars were found at one Indus site. This makes some archeologists suspect that the Harappan civilization may have had an early form of Hinduism as a religion.