Then what are we to make of the Egyptians, archaeology, and the like? If you are to believe in modern science, radio carbon dating must be accurate. Did animals pre-date humans? That would be an issue with Genesis.
Clearly Noah could not gather animals he didn’t even know of, nor every sub-species of animal.
Archaeology teaches us a great deal about the past; but I don’t have to agree with every conclusion reached by every scientist in order to respect science as a whole.
As to the Egyptians I’m not sure what your point is.
Radio carbon dating is useful, but that doesn’t preclude the possibility of errors or mistaken conclusions. Could you be more specific about what you believe carbon dating proves?
As for animals pre-dating humans:
(a) Genesis was composed thousands of years ago by people who wouldn’t have comprehended modern science. That doesn’t make what they wrote lies; it means they expressed their meanings in ways we’re not familiar with. Interpretation is not always easy.
None the less Genesis gives us a coherent account of God forming the world we know, and completing the process by creating the First Man and the First Woman.
(b) The second sentence of Genesis 1 tells us the earth was a chaotic wasteland. Why would God begin the creation of the world by making a wasteland?
My own take on it is that life existed for a very long time before that; then some form of world-wide disaster reduced the world to a wasteland.
Then God reformed the world, setting things to rights, and finished the process by creating Mankind.
This allows room for animals to have existed for millions of years, possibly billions of years, before whatever disaster caused the chaos. Then God created new life as He reformed the world.
So what disaster, and why did God allow it?
I don’t know. The Bible is not meant as a scientific history of the world. It’s meant to tell us the things we need to know to serve and obey God and save our own souls. For that purpose we don’t need the complete history of the world.
That being said I admire scientists for their work in revealing so much of God’s creation to us. It’s good that we can know about dinosaurs.
As for Noah and the Ark:
I don’t know how he could do that. I don’t know for sure that he
did do that, at least in the way we read the description. We may be misunderstanding the meaning of the Flood account, and/or mistaking metaphorical descriptions for literal ones.