98% of scriptures ( rough guess) don't break any Scientific laws or principals. So of all the people who have found the 98% to be True, only a percentage of those have a scientific interest in evaluating the 2% that causes a problem.
I'm not sure what Bible you are reading, but I would put the figure for God's direct intervention in the world as attested in Scripture at a much higher rate. And these direct interventions do, indeed break scientific 'laws', whatever that might mean.
The whole point of Scripture is to identify God's hand working in the world, and therefore I would say that as much as 33% or more attests to just such working, from the creation to Moses to Joseph to David etc etc.
I am not sure what the point is in trying to say that the Bible accords with science. Clearly it doesn't, but clearly also, I would have thought, it is not intended to. The Bible does not belong on the same shelf in any library as scientific books, and scientific books do not belong on the same shelf as the Bible.
It is like comparing icing sugar with soap powder. What is the point? Icing sugar is no use whatsoever for washing clothes, and soap powder makes
terrible icing. Quite simply, they have different purposes, and when used appropriately are very useful indeed, but they are not interchangeable.
Which is why it is pointless discussing the dimensions of the ark, or how many animals could really have got inside. The story of Noah is not a treatise on how to build a lifeboat in the event of an impending flood. It is the story of how people who had suffered and survived a terrible flood came to terms with this, probably while very traumatised and suffering survivor guilt, and decided that those who died must have died because God wanted them to, and if God wanted them to, they must have been evil. In effect, they concluded that their God had lost his temper with mankind, and then comforted themselves by saying that he had then decided not to do it again. Whether this is actually what happened then, any more than in the recent tsunami, is open to discussion.
Alternative interpretations of the story of Noah exist, of course, but that is as good as any, imo.