Eblaitica: Essays on the Ebla Archives and Eblaite Language, vol. 4, 2002
Cyrus Herzl Gordon, Gary Rendsburg, Nathan H. Winter
http://books.google.ru/books?id=0Rwals-oh6...;q=&f=false
"The Transtigridian Arman(um) is attested in other cuneiform sources. The Ur III references to the military colony at Arman(64) only show evidence that the place was, at that time, part of the directly administered territory of the kingdom (which excluded Syria); however, its appearances in late-second-millennium records allow for a more specific location. The city, called at that time Arman of Ugar-Sali, stood north of Mount Ebih (G^ebel H.amrin), south of the Little Zab, and west of Lubdi (near T.awuq) and the Radanu River (‘Uz.aym and the middle of its headwater streams, T.awuq Cay).(65). It is no mere coincidence that Hildegard Lewy, proceeding from the topographic data of u local map excavated in Sargonic Gasur (later Nuzi), pinpointed the site of Maškan-Dur-Ebla ("the settlement of the fortress of Ebla") right within the area of the Ugar-Sali district.(66)"