A sand table uses constrained sand for modelling or educational purposes. The original version of a sand table may be the abax used by early Greek students. In the modern era, one common use for a sand table is to make terrain models for and wargaming.
The abax was the predecessor to the abacus. Objects, such as stones, were added for counting and then columns for place-valued arithmetic. The demarcation between an abax and an abacus seems to be poorly defined in history;Ifrah 2000:125–126 and others moreover, modern definitions of the word abacus universally describe it as a frame with rods and beadsSee American Heritage definition of "abacus" in External Links below and, in general, do not include the definition of "sand table".
The sand table may well have been the predecessor to some board games. ("The word abax, or abacus, is used both for the reckoning-board with its counters and the play-board with its pieces, ...").Taylor 1879:28 Abax is from the old Greek for "sand table".American Heritage:abacus
In 1991, "Special Forces teams discovered an elaborate sand-table model of the Iraqi military plan for the defense of Kuwait City. Four huge red arrows from the sea pointed at the coastline of Kuwait City and the huge defensive effort positioned there. Small fences of concertina wire marked the shoreline and models of artillery pieces lined the shore area. Throughout the city were plastic models of other artillery and air defense positions, while thin, red-painted strips of board designated supply routes and main highways." Arab Forces, Marines Take Kuwait City – The Washington Post, 28 February 1991
In 2006, Google Earth users looking at satellite photography of China found a several kilometre large "sand table" scale model, strikingly reminiscent of a mountainous region (Aksai Chin) which China occupies militarily in a disputed zone with India, 2400 km from the model's location. Speculation has been rife that the terrain is used for military exercises of familiarisation. Chinese X-file excites spotters – Sydney Morning Herald, 20 July 2006 From sky, see how China builds model of Indian border 2400 km away – indianexpress.com, 4 August 2006
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