The identities of more victims have emerged in the massive California boat fire that killed 34 people onboard, including a teacher and his adult daughter who bonded over diving, according to new reports.

Raymond “Scott” Chan, 59, a Fremont high school physics teacher, and his 26-year-old daughter Kendra, a wildlife biologist, were killed when the doomed diving boat, known as the Conception, caught fire and sank off the coast of Southern California early Monday, KTVU reported.

Vicki Moore, Chan’s wife and Kendra’s mother, struggled to comprehend the tragic loss.

“Right now, it’s a combination of just shock and disbelief and some numbness,” she told the station. “You don’t expect to have a child that dies before you. I can barely talk about my husband, but frankly, it’s even harder when it’s your own child.”

Moore said her husband of 35 years and her first-born child were avid scuba divers and had been diving together for years. The pair, from Los Altos, took at least two boat trips to the Channel Islands each year.

Moore told the outlet that she had dropped her husband off at Santa Barbara Harbor Friday night and met Kendra, who lived in Oxnard, there. She had planned to pick both of them up on Monday.

She told the station that she met Scott at Stanford University, and he worked as an electrical engineer in Silicon Valley for 20 years before teaching physics at American High School in Fremont for the past two years.

“He had a lot of passions in life and shared them with his family, and so they were planning on doing a great vacation and a trip that they loved,” Fremont Unified School District superintendent Kim Wallace told the station. “The students and the staff are in complete shock, as were we when we heard of the news.”

“We send our condolences to Mr. Chan’s family and the American High School community,” the district posted to Facebook.

Kendra worked for the US Fish and Wildlife Service in Ventura, her mother said.

“I was so proud, so proud of her and all that she was doing,” Moore told the station. “She was absolutely an amazing young woman.”

Arizona couple Patricia Beitzinger and Neal Baltz were also aboard the ill-fated ship, according to ABC 15.

“They went to heaven doing something they loved together,” John Baltz, Neal’s father, told the station.

Beitzinger’s family said they weren’t ready to comment, and were awaiting “official confirmation” from authorities.

Thirty-three passengers and one crew member were still aboard the ship when it sank early Monday, officials have said. Other victims included three sisters who were celebrating their dad’s birthday, and marine biologist Kristy Finstad, who ran Worldwide Diving Adventures, which hired the boat for the three-day diving excursion.