20/04/2026
Kia ora! For today's , we are exploring one of our most popular volcanoes, Maungawhau (Mt Eden).
Located in the heart of the city, Maungawhau rises 196 m above sea level, providing spectacular views of Auckland City and the surrounding Maunga. Maungawhai can be described like a 'fried egg' - with a scoria cone (yolk) surrounded by a field of lava flows (egg white). The two scoria cones are believed to have erupted through the lava flows of the earlier Te Kōpuke/Mt St John (owner of the longest lava flow in the AVF), roughly 28,000 years ago.
Te Kapua kai a Mataaho - the perfect crater 🥣
The crater of the higher southern cone is shaped like an inverted circular cone, about 180 m in diameter and 50 m deep. Such a deep and perfectly shaped crater is rare in the AVF. In pre-European times, this crater was known as Te Kapua Kai a Mataaho, 'the food bowl of Mataaho' - the deity of volcanic activity.
Rising vents 🌋⬆️
During the early phases of the eruption, lava was hot and fluid, reaching long distances as far as New Market and Balmoral. However, as the eruption progressed, lava cooled and thickened, piling up at the base of the cone to form a 'pedestal' around the Maunga. Consequently, as solidified lava blocked the lower vents at the base, 'younger' lava was forced to squeeze out of progressively higher exit points up the cone.
Human history 🧍🏽🧍🏻
The Māori name, Maungawhau, means 'hill of the whau tree'. Before Europeans arrived, this scoria cone was extensively modified to create a pā. On the outer slopes, numerous flat terraces were used partly for defence but mainly for living and working space. The English name, Mt Eden, was given by Governor William Hobson (who also named Ōhinerau/Mt Hobson). Several large quarries worked the thicker flows, operating for many years near Mt Eden Prison, with the road to the top of the mountain constructed by prison labour between 1869 and 1880.
Acknowledgements
📖 'Volcanoes of Auckland' by Bruce Hayward
📸 Bruce Hayward (2009) & Auckland Museum