Before the initial mapping of the area introduced labelling confusion, the local Māori name for the cone was Tongariro, and its summit crater was known as Ngāuruhoe. The local Māori traditions state that the volcano was named by
Ngātoro-i-rangi, an ancestor of the local Māori
iwi,
Ngāti Tūwharetoa. Ngātoro-i-rangi called volcanic fire from his homeland
Hawaiki, which eventually emerged at Ngauruhoe. The name given by Ngātoro-i-rangi (
Ngāuruhoe) either commemorates his slave, who had died from the cold before the fire arrived, or refers to the insertions (
ngā uru) of Ngātoro-i-rangi's
hoe (paddle-like staff) into the ground during his summoning of the volcanic fire. == Geology ==