Nicolas Sanson drew an ancient Babylonian map of the known world on what? What was it drawn on, I am taking this to mean what type of paper, etc. The question reads as follows: An ancient Babylonian map of the known world was drawn on ________ and labeled in cuneiform.

He probably drew it on clay. The world's earliest known map, one of Babylonia, was drawn on a clay tablet. Check this site.

http://www.armenica.org/cgi-bin/armenica.cgi?128711177342669=1=3==Historical%20maps==1=3=AAA

Here are some interesting sites about Sanson.

http://www.philaprintshop.com/sanson.html

http://www.maphist.com/artman/publish/article_180.shtml

Nicolas Sanson did not draw an ancient Babylonian map of the known world, as he was a French cartographer who lived from 1600 to 1667. However, ancient Babylonians did create maps on various materials, including clay tablets and stone tablets.

The most well-known ancient Babylonian map is the "Imago Mundi" or "Map of the World" from the 6th century BCE, which was discovered on a clay tablet known as the "Babylonian Map of the World." This unique map was drawn on a flat clay tablet with cuneiform script, which is an ancient system of writing using wedge-shaped marks.

The Babylonian Map of the World is considered one of the earliest known world maps and provides a representation of the Mesopotamian worldview from that time period. It depicts various regions and cities with rivers and mountains, portraying a rather simplified and stylized version of the world as the Babylonians knew it.

So, to answer your question, the ancient Babylonian map of the known world was drawn on a clay tablet and labeled in cuneiform script.