The Haunted Sea with Scott Mardis- Megalodon the World's Greatest.. Scavenger?

Published: Feb. 28, 2019, 8 p.m.

Scott Mardis and Julie Rench sit down with award winning book author of the "Kronos Rising" series Max Hawthorne to discuss Max's theory that Megalodons, as they reached adult sizes, graduated from active hunters\xa0to active scavengers.\xa0\n\nScott Mardis has been an active field investigator of\xa0the Lake Champlain \u201cMonster\u201d since 1992. He is a former sustaining member of the defunct International Society of Cryptozoology and a former volunteer worker in the Vertebrate Paleontology Dept. of the Philadelphia Academy of Natural Sciences (1990-1992). He co-authored a scientific abstract about the Lake Champlain hydrophone sounds for the Acoustical Society of America in 2010. He currently lives in Bradenton, Florida.\xa0\n\nJoin Scott's Facebook group The Zombie Plesiosaur at\xa0https://www.facebook.com/groups/1474466226107588/\n\nKnown as the Prince of Paleofiction, Max Hawthorne is the author of the award-winning KRONOS RISING novel series and an amateur paleontologist to boot. His research credits include solving the mystery of how plesiosaurs utilized all four flippers to swim, and how changes in the morphology of the Megalodon shark\u2019s teeth, from birth to adulthood, indicated a conversion from hunting to scavenging.\n\nCheck out Max's website!\xa0http://www.kronosrising.com/\n\nTo read Max's theory about History's Mightiest.. Scavnger? go here:\xa0https://www.kronosrising.com/megalodon-historys-mightiest-scavenger/\n\nJulie Rench is a marine creature enthusiast and lives in her beautiful home state of North Carolina and a co-host of Monster X Radio.