Acclimation to high elevation was a key factor in their reports
The need for this varies by elevation. That seems obvious, since a lake at 500 feet of altitude is a lot different from Lake Titicaca. The difference is not linear, though, and the need for acclimation grows significantly greater when you get to the really high elevations. It is one of the problems I have with George Irvine's famous proclamation that divers don't need to pay any attention to altitude in their dive planning. The only factor he considered was acclimation, and he said that by the time you get to the site, get set up, etc., you are acclimated. That is true for the altitude dives most of us do, but when you get up higher, it is absolutely false. That is why the US Navy diving manual's section on altitude diving includes a paragraph in bright red, bold print saying that no diving should be done above 10,000 feet without prior clearance. I am convinced that the failure to acclimate is the reason one of my friends was paralyzed and the other died on a very high altitude dive.
(That is not the only thing wrong with Irvine's statement, BTW.)