A group of expert Finnish divers may have solved the mystery surrounding the deaths of five Italians who perished while exploring deep-sea caves in the Maldives. The group, all from Italy, set off to explore caverns in the Vaavu Atoll last Thursday, but never resurfaced. The body of diving instructor Gianluca Benedetti was found near the mouth of the Thinwana Kandu cave on the day the divers disappeared, while the remaining four bodies were located in the cavern's third and final chamber on Monday at a depth of around 165ft. Mystery has clouded the tragedy, which has been called the worst diving incident in the island nation, as investigators try to determine how the group of experienced scuba divers met their fate. Now, a team of expert divers from Finland, who recovered the bodies this week, has suggested the group may have taken the wrong tunnel on their way out of an underwater cave. The pro-divers, working for Dan Europe - a medical and research organisation dedicated to the health and safety of scuba divers - found the Italians in a corridor with a dead end inside the cave complex, Italy's daily newspaper La Repubblica reported.'There was no way out from there,' the company's CEO, Laura Marroni, was quoted by La Repubblica as saying.The group of five included Monica Montefalcone, a marine biology professor with many years of experience; her daughter, Giorgia Sommacal; two young researchers, Federico Gualtieri and Muriel Oddenino; and their Maldives-based guide, Benedetti. A team of Finnish experts has suggested the group of five who died while diving in the Maldives may have taken the wrong tunnel on their way out of an underwater cave. Above, a recovery dive to find the remaining bodies on Wednesday