"[This] is a must read for anyone who enjoys crackling underwater adventure!" Florida Outdoors Magazine. Why ride sharks? Bill Royal's first large shark was wrestled in to feed his family during the Depression. Later he risked his life capturing sharks by hand, alive, for scientists doing human cancer research. One of the first pioneer cave divers, join Bill when he gets lost in an underwater cave, his light goes out, and he is taking his last breathes of air. Or go along on a 230-foot deep dive into a cave when his air runs out completely! Following a trail of prehistoric animal bones leads Royal to discover a prehistoric Ice Age Man graveyard in Florida's Warm Mineral Spring that enables scientists to recover remains dating back 12,000 years. Here is high voltage adventure about one of diving's luckiest and most fearless of its underwater pioneers. 284-pages Paperback 7x10.5x.75-inches with remarkable photographs. © 2000 Published by iUniverse.com.
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FROM THE BOOK: "I was spearfishing alone a hundred yards from the boat when a tiger shark with pectoral fins so big he looked like a heavy bomber approached and started circling me. He was in no hurry. His movements were close and deliberate. His markings were those of a young adult about twelve feet long. A READER REVIEW: "The Man Who Rode Sharks was
originally published in 1978 and is now republished by the Authors Guild Backinprint
Editions through iUniverse.com, Inc. This book by Colonel William R. Royal (written with
Robert F. Burgess) is about Royal's adventures and subsequent new discoveries in shark
behavior and underwater archaeology. Actually, two stories in one, the first half of the
book details Royal's work with sharks from the 1930s through the 1960s. He became
fascinated with sharks from his first encounter with them in 1931 when he leaped into the
water to catch a shark to feed his family during the Depression Years. During his travels
in the military service he took up scuba diving and had more exciting encounters with them
in the Pacific and Mediterranean Sea. After the war Royal was hired to capture sharks for
a scientific laboratory. He became known as 'the man who rode sharks' because that is what
he did to capture them undamaged and alive. Usually he grabbed a nurse shark by the tail
and let it drag him around until it tired (always making sure he stayed away from the
head, of course). This enabled his catch to be loaded aboard a boat alive, a requirement
requested by scientists doing research on squalene, a shark liver extract being
investigated then as a possible cure for human cancer. The second half of the book is
about Royal's most important contribution to science. When he moved to Florida in 1958, he
became interested in Warm Mineral Springs and Little Salt Springs in the central part of
the state. Up to this point no one had ventured very deep into these springs. Shortly
after scuba gear became available in this country, Royal donned this equipment and started
exploring these over 200-feet-deep springs. What he found there proved too unbelievable
for the scientists of the day. Deep in Warm Mineral Spring beside prehistoric animal bones
buried in mud on a forty-foot deep ledge, Royal found a human skull that carbon-dated to
over 10,000 years old! And inside it was identifiable human brain material! Stalactites
from the ceiling in the underwater spring indicated that this was once a dry cave,
believed to date back to the last Ice Age. Since Early man was not thought to have been in
Florida then, scientists of the day questioned the authenticity of these finds, especially
since they had been made by an 'amateur.' Royal spent much of his life trying to persuade
qualified underwater archaeologists to come to the spring and do a proper archaeological
investigation of the sites. Eventually they did and toward the end of his life, the
scientific community properly recognized the pioneering part Bill Royal played in these
discoveries. Written in a narrative style by Robert Burgess, who dived these sites with
Royal to photograph and record details of his achievements, he details Royal's incredible
narrow escapes from sharks, cave-ins and dangerous depths. His style enables readers to
relive the excitement of these adventures of a truly unique underwater pioneer. Anyone who
thrives on fast-paced true adventure action will find this book a real hair-raiser!" CLICK ON THE BOOK TITLE BELOW TO ORDER THIS BOOK FROM BARNES & NOBLE. (Use your browser's Back button to return to this website. We also encourage you to save this website as a Favorite in your browser!): © 2000, 2001 Robert F. Burgess. All rights reserved. |