"My belief isn't secure from attack as you assert."
No, you just ignore the mountains of evidence that prove that the Bible's story of the Noachian deluge is complete fiction.
"Scientists aim for their studies' findings to be replicable — so that, for example, an experiment testing ideas about the attraction between electrons and protons should yield the same results when repeated in different labs. This goal of replicability makes sense. After all, science aims to reconstruct the unchanging rules by which the universe operates, and those same rules apply, 24 hours a day, seven days a week, from Sweden to Saturn, regardless of who is studying them. If a finding can't be replicated, it suggests that our current understanding of the study system or our methods of testing are insufficient. ... The desire for replicability is part of the reason that scientific papers almost always include a methods section."
Excellent! Then all those Bible thumpers should be able to replicate the global flood scenario as reported in the Bible. Rather than using reconstructed arks as money-making amusement attractions. It should be easy to gather two of every "kind" of animal, float in one of their reconstructed arks (a real wooden one like Noah had, not one built atop a steel barge) for a year or so, land on a deserted island and repopulate it with something on the order of the millions of species we see today. Or do you think that your Bible stories don't require the same standard of scientific proof?