×
AI helps Italian rescue team find missing hiker after 11 months
Written by
Published on
Join our daily newsletter for breaking news, product launches and deals, research breakdowns, and other industry-leading AI coverage
Join Now

Italy’s National Alpine and Speleological Rescue Corps (CNSAS) used artificial intelligence to locate the body of a missing hiker after nearly 11 months, analyzing 2,600 drone images in just one afternoon to spot his helmet among the mountainous terrain. The breakthrough demonstrates how AI-powered search and rescue operations can dramatically reduce recovery times from weeks or months of manual analysis to hours, potentially saving lives in future mountain emergencies.

How it worked: The rescue team deployed drones across a 183-hectare area on the north face of Monviso, Italy’s highest peak in the Cottian Alps, capturing thousands of aerial images from approximately 50 meters above ground.

  • AI software analyzed the drone footage and identified “suspicious spots” where pixels differed in color from the surrounding landscape, flagging the victim’s helmet as an anomaly.
  • The entire imaging process took five hours with two drones on Tuesday morning, with AI analysis completed the same afternoon—bad weather delayed the physical recovery until Thursday.
  • Dr. Nicola Ivaldo’s body was found at 3,150 meters altitude, more than 600 meters below the summit, exactly where the AI had detected the distinctive helmet pixels.

The rescue operation: CNSAS drone pilot Saverio Isola and his colleague Giorgio Viana led the three-day operation that successfully located 64-year-old Ligurian doctor Nicola Ivaldo, who had been missing since September 2024.

  • “It was the AI software that identified some pixels of a different color in the images taken on Tuesday,” Isola explained, describing how the technology pinpointed the victim’s location in one of three ravines cutting through the mountain’s north face.
  • Rescuers woke at 4 AM to reach a vantage point with clear visibility to the suspected location, using drones to confirm the helmet sighting before coordinating with fire brigade helicopters for body recovery.

Technology evolution: CNSAS has been developing AI-enhanced search capabilities for 18 months as part of a five-year drone program, integrating color and shape recognition technologies in coordination with ENAC, Italy’s national aviation agency.

  • The rescue corps is expanding beyond visual analysis to thermal imaging, with AI systems capable of interpreting heat signatures from living beings to locate survivors in real-time.
  • “Just like with still images, AI is also able to interpret thermal data and provide valuable information in just a few hours,” Isola noted, citing a recent successful rescue of climbers in Sardinia using similar technology.

The bigger picture: This successful recovery represents a significant advancement in mountain rescue capabilities, where traditional search methods would have required weeks or months of dangerous manual searching across treacherous terrain.

  • The technology prevented rescue teams from risking their lives in hazardous conditions, as it did during the Marmolada Glacier tragedy where drones enabled recovery operations in previously inaccessible areas.
  • CNSAS aims to use this AI-drone combination proactively to save missing people while they’re still alive, potentially reducing fatal mountain accidents through faster response times.

What they’re saying: “It’s a human achievement, but without technology, it would have been an impossible mission. It’s a team success,” said Isola, emphasizing the collaboration between AI systems and experienced mountain rescue teams.

A Hiker Was Missing for Nearly a Year—Until an AI System Recognized His Helmet

Recent News

Obituaries are being Hallmark carded by funeral homes, loved ones using ChatGPT

Automating the final goodbye raises questions about authenticity in grief.

Monkey brain, explained: Chinese researchers build AI system with 2B neurons to mimic macaque neurology

Neuromorphic chips could slash AI's unsustainable energy consumption by mimicking biological brains.

Google’s AI overviews devastate website traffic as users bypass primary sources

Publishers face a "Google apocalypse" as traffic-dependent business models collapse overnight.