The text stumbles into a clear chronological and geographical error regarding the survivors of the global flood and the ancestry of the 7th-century pagan Arabs.
Surah 69:11:
Indeed, when the water overflowed, We carried you in the sailing vessel.
The Arabic text uses the second-person plural suffix pronoun "kum" (meaning "you" or "your collective selves"). It explicitly addresses the immediate 7th-century audience listening to Muhammad—the pagan Quraysh tribe of Mecca.
The text claims the Ark was preserved as a physical sign specifically for them ("make it for you a reminder").
According to Genesis 6-9, the only human survivors of the flood were eight specific people: Noah, his wife, his three sons (Shem, Ham, and Japheth), and their wives.
From a biblical and historical standpoint, this is an anachronism. The Ark rested thousands of miles away on Mount Ararat, and the covenant was universal to all mankind via Noah's sons, not a localized, isolated sign for a specific Arabian tribe centuries later.