"The temperature was starting to rise, very slowly, in late-August, but with quite a bit a lot of variability. However by 2 September a rising trend was clearly established."
About two days after the lake temperature stared to rise, the level of volcanic tremor also started to rise and has remained.
On May 11, the lake reached 46 C, the highest observed since it reformed in 1999. This high temperature was also accompanied by volcanic tremor and an increase in the output of volcanic gas.
The Volcanic Alert Level was raised to level 2, lowering to level 1 in early July as output and volcanic tremor levels declined.
Volcanic alerts range from 1 to 5, with 1 being "minor volcanic unrest" and 5 being a "major volcanic eruption".
The record temperature for the lake was 60C in 1968.
Further sampling and visits to the crater lake were planned if weather allowed, Geonet said, which was part of its standard monitoring programme for Mt Ruapehu.
GeoNet obtains temperatures from the lake using a data logger with a temperature sensor in the lake and communications via satellite link.