In the turquoise depths of Vaavu Atoll, five experienced Italian divers— including a marine biology professor, her young daughter, and fellow researchers—entered an underwater cave system around 50-60 meters (164-197 feet) deep. They were laughing and excited just minutes earlier. They never resurfaced. What makes this tragedy especially disturbing is a key forensic detail now emerging: their oxygen supplies had not run out when they died.
This revelation has shifted the focus of the investigation dramatically. Rather than a simple case of running out of air in a remote cave, authorities and experts are examining whether a catastrophic failure in gas management—possibly oxygen toxicity (hyperoxia)—struck the group suddenly, leaving them incapacitated in an overhead environment from which escape was nearly impossible.
The Incident: A Routine Dive Turns Catastrophic

On May 14, 2026, the group boarded the liveaboard-style yacht Duke of York for what was intended as an adventurous exploration of underwater caves near Alimatha island in Vaavu Atoll, roughly 100 km south of Malé. The area is celebrated for its dramatic channels, coral overhangs, and cave-like formations that attract technical divers.
The victims were:
Monica Montefalcone, associate professor of marine ecology at the University of Genoa, a respected researcher and TV personality known for her work on marine ecosystems.
Giorgia Sommacal, her 20-year-old daughter.
Muriel Oddenino, a researcher from the Turin area with ties to Genoa’s academic community.
Gianluca Benedetti, a diving instructor from Padua.
Federico Gualtieri from Borgomanero.
The group failed to return at the expected midday time. Boat crew raised the alarm around 1:45 p.m. local time. Rough weather, including strong winds and a yellow warning for maritime activities, hampered initial response efforts. Maldives National Defence Force (MNDF) specialist teams eventually located one body inside a cave around 6:15 p.m. Recovery of the remaining four has proven extremely challenging due to depth, confined spaces, and conditions.
This is believed to be one of the worst single diving incidents in Maldivian history, a destination that sees millions of tourist dives annually with a strong safety record—until now.
The Disturbing Detail: Tanks Weren’t Empty
Early speculation centered on divers becoming lost or trapped and exhausting their air. However, reports indicate that post-recovery analysis of the equipment showed the primary cylinders (often called “oxygen capsules” in sensational coverage) still contained significant gas when the victims were found.
This rules out simple asphyxiation from out-of-air emergencies in the classic sense. Instead, it points toward a rapid, incapacitating event that prevented the divers from using their remaining supply or making a safe exit.
Oxygen toxicity has emerged as a leading hypothesis among diving experts and pulmonologists commenting on the case. At depths beyond 40-50 meters, breathing standard air or improperly mixed nitrox (oxygen-enriched air) can push the partial pressure of oxygen (PPO2) into dangerous territory. Symptoms include twitching, visual disturbances, nausea, seizures, and sudden unconsciousness—often with little warning. In a cave, a single seizure can lead to loss of the regulator, panic among buddies, entanglement, or silt-out that seals the fate of the entire team.
Pulmonologists and diving medicine specialists have noted that hyperoxia can cause acute neurological and respiratory issues. One Italian expert suggested an “inadequate breathing mix” or contamination (e.g., hydrocarbons from improper filling) as possible culprits. The yacht reportedly offered nitrox blends, which are common for extended bottom times but require precise analysis and depth limits.
Why Oxygen Toxicity Fits the Evidence
Simultaneous or near-simultaneous incapacitation: All five failed to surface, consistent with a shared environmental factor like gas mix rather than individual errors.
Gas remaining: Toxicity kills before the tank empties.

Depth and environment: 50-60m in an overhead cave exceeds typical recreational limits. Nitrogen narcosis could compound impaired judgment.
Cave diving specifics: No direct ascent possible; any disorientation is magnified.
Forensic examination of the tanks, regulators, dive computers, and gas logs (if any) will be critical. Autopsies are expected to check for signs of oxygen toxicity, such as pulmonary damage or central nervous system effects.
The Human Stories Behind the Headlines
Monica Montefalcone was not just an academic; she was a passionate advocate for ocean conservation. Her decision to bring her daughter Giorgia on this trip spoke to a shared love of the sea. Colleagues at the University of Genoa described the loss as devastating, mourning a professor, her daughter, and young researchers in one blow.
Gianluca Benedetti’s role as a diving instructor suggests the group had professional oversight, raising questions about planning and risk assessment. The presence of multiple academics hints this may have had a scientific or exploratory component beyond pure recreation.
Technical Diving Risks in Paradise
The Maldives markets itself as a diver’s dream, with sites like Vaavu famous for pelagic life and dramatic topography. However, cave and deep diving demand specialized training (cavern/cave certification, technical decompression procedures, redundant gas systems) that goes far beyond open-water scuba.
Standard recreational limits cap depths at 30-40 meters. Technical dives require:
Multiple tanks or rebreathers with precise gas mixes (e.g., trimix for deeper work).
Redundant regulators, lights, reels, and buoyancy control.
Strict gas management rules, including turn pressures and decompression obligations.
Team protocols and surface support.
Investigators are scrutinizing whether the group had appropriate certifications, whether the dive plan accounted for currents and weather, and if equipment was properly analyzed and maintained. The boat’s nitrox capabilities are under review.
Broader Implications and Ongoing Investigation
Maldivian police, in coordination with Italian authorities, are reconstructing the timeline, examining weather data, witness statements from the crew, and all equipment. The Italian Foreign Ministry is supporting families and monitoring the probe.
This tragedy has sparked intense discussion in the global scuba community. Forums debate gas mixing errors, the dangers of “recreational” cave diving, and the need for stricter oversight of technical activities by tourists in popular destinations.
Diving safety organizations emphasize that even experts must treat overhead environments with extreme caution. “Just because you can doesn’t mean you should,” is a common refrain. Conservative planning, proper training, and respecting personal and environmental limits save lives.
Lessons from the Depths
Gas Analysis is Non-Negotiable: Every tank should be tested before the dive.
Depth + Overhead = Technical Protocol: Standard recreational training is insufficient.
Redundancy Saves Lives: Backup regulators, lights, and gases are essential.
Weather and Currents Matter: Conditions on the day included warnings that may have influenced surge or visibility.
Team and Communication: In caves, buddy awareness and pre-dive briefings are critical.
As recovery operations continue and autopsies and equipment tests proceed, the full cause may soon be confirmed. For now, the image of five tanks with air still inside haunts the diving world—a reminder that the ocean can turn deadly in moments, even when supplies remain.
The families grieve not only the loss of loved ones but the abrupt end to a shared passion for the underwater world. Monica and Giorgia’s story, in particular, resonates as a mother-daughter adventure that ended in shared tragedy.
The azure waters of the Maldives will continue to call divers, but this incident underscores a timeless truth: respect the physics of pressure, gas, and confinement. What begins with laughter and excitement can end in silence when one unexpected factor—perhaps a miscalculated oxygen partial pressure—changes everything 160 feet below the surface.
The investigation continues. Answers, when they come, may prevent future losses in one of the world’s most beautiful diving destinations.
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