No. That's my very point!
I contend that bible if skeptics limit themselves to what the text specially (literally) states, then we wouldn't be arguing over stuff like
@Mr Laurier 's speculations about Noah embarking on an "ocean-going" cruise around the world and needing boiler plate steel in case of icebergs. There's nothing in the text to suggest that the Ark did anything other than float. Neither does the text speak of icebergs or starting out in Asia and finishing up in the Americas.
The text doesn't state that all mountain tops were all submerged to the exact same depth at the exact same moment and that they ALL became visible (to Noah) at the same moment. So I shouldn't have to defend an accusation that that's what occurred. BUT....a tidal swell, or tsunami could yield a temporary covering of mountain tops at one point on the globe and then others on the opposite side of the globe such that all mountains WERE covered - just not simultaneously. The text doesn't require a defense of simultaneous mountaintop coverage.
And this is not word games or semantic gymnastics. Nor is it me playing the miracle card.