The Bible and the Qur'an do not contain scientific knowledge that was not already common knowledge at the time when these two great books were composed.
Having said that, it must be agreed that the Islamic civilization in the first centuries after the time of Muhammad was very favorable to the spread and development of science and philosophy. Islamic scholars gave first priority to theology and Qur'anic study, but they certainly did not neglect the pursuit of secular disciplines. The Arabic scholars preserved the intellectual heritage of the ancient Greeks, and allowed for this heritage to be later transmitted to Western civilization at the time of the Renaissance.
The Islamic scholars, for example, kept alive the mathematics of Euclid and Archimedes, the astronomy of Claudius Ptolemy, and the medicine of Hippocrates. Without the intervention of these scholars, such eminent books as the Elements of Geometry and the Almagest might have been lost forever.