Temperatures at Mt Ruapehu's crater lake Te Wai a-moe have been rising in step with an increase in volcanic tremors, indicating a state of minor unrest at the mountain.
But scientists believe the activity is part of a heating cycle that's long been observed at Mt Ruapehu, which officially remains at the second lowest Volcanic Alert Level.
"Te Wai a-moe has a clear temperature cycle that we have observed since 2003," GNS Science duty volcanologist Geoff Kilgour said.
During these cycles, the temperature ranged between 12C and 40C over a period of around a year.
GNS Science previously reported how a relatively long-period of elevated temperature of Te Wai a-moe was coming to an end.