Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Mont Djoudi" in French language version.
.« Cudi Dagh is located approximately 200 miles south of Mt. Ararat in southern Turkey almost within eyesight of the Syrian and Iraqi borders. The Tigris River flows at its base. The exact co-ordinates are 37° 21′ N, 42° 17′ E ... just east of the present Turkish city of Gizre and still within the bounds of the Biblical region of Ararat (Urartu). The Nestorians ... built several monasteries around the mountain including one on the summit called 'The Cloister of the Ark'. It was destroyed by lightning in 766 A.D. The Muslims later built a mosque on the site. In 1910, Gertrude Bell explored the area and found a stone structure still at the summit with the shape of a ship called by the locals 'Sefinet Nebi Nuh' 'The Ship of Noah'. ... As late as 1949 two Turkish journalists claimed to have seen the Ark on this mountain, a ship 500 feet in length! »