"Seismic activity at Mt Ruapehu is usually dominated by volcanic tremor," GNS volcanologist Brad Scott said.
Scientists had however not noted any changes in other monitored parameters like volcanic gas, lake chemistry or lake overflow.
"Currently we are uncertain of the implications of the recent observations."
The developments weren't sufficient enough to upgrade Mt Ruapehu's Volcanic Alert Level, which remained at 1.
They come in the same week that an eruption at White Island late on Wednesday night threw material across the offshore volcano's crater.
But Mr Scott said this event wasn't related.
The two occurrences could be compared to a pair of houses that both fed into the same water main, with one having problems with its sink and the other with its bath.
"We have examples of volcanoes behaving together and equally we have examples of volcanoes not behaving together," Mr Scott said.
"In the 1940s, for example, Mt Ngauruhoe was having lava flows and Mt Ruapehu was having its first eruption in 50 years, and then come 1995, Mt Ruapehu was erupting again and Mt Ngauruhoe was dead as.
"Of all the people who have looked at the relationships, nobody has been able to demonstrate a repeatable one."