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I looked and could not find anything, but my experience in 40 years of marine equipment repair suggests you will need a mix of heat, cold, and pressure.
One POSSIBLE approach.
Remove the prop bolt.
Set up the biggest hydraulic press frame you can find, and support the back of the hub firmly, with the prop bolt hole UP. If you can, DO NOT use the hub flanges for this support. Figure out how to catch the crank when it pops out of the hub.
Put the crank hub flange down into a temperature controlled oil bath (as hot as you dare given the oil you have - synthetic motor oil ? but less than 600 deg F, where steel starts to lose strength) that JUST covers the hub itself. Leave it there till it equilibrates.
Quickly pull it out, put it in the press, and drop a substantial chunk, or a cup full of flaked, dry ice into the bolt hole, and quickly start pressing the ram onto the end of the crank.
Bang, you're done.
Or no bang, and you send the whole assembly to Oshkosh and let them do it.