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Lambert's Mine (Maltby Lakes Mine), West Haven, New Haven County, Connecticut, USAi
Regional Level Types
Lambert's Mine (Maltby Lakes Mine)Group of Mines
West HavenCity
New Haven CountyCounty
ConnecticutState
USACountry

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Latitude & Longitude (WGS84):
41° 18' 22'' North , 72° 58' 57'' West
Latitude & Longitude (decimal):
Type:
Group of Mines
Köppen climate type:
Nearest Settlements:
PlacePopulationDistance
New Haven130,322 (2017)4.6km
Orange13,956 (2017)4.7km
West Haven54,927 (2017)5.0km
Woodbridge9,355 (2017)5.6km
Woodmont1,505 (2017)8.7km
Nearest Clubs:
Local clubs are the best way to get access to collecting localities
ClubLocationDistance
New Haven Mineral ClubNew Haven, Connecticut5km
Lapidary and Mineral Society of Central ConnecticutMeriden, Connecticut30km
Danbury Mineralogical SocietyDanbury, Connecticut41km
Bristol Gem & Mineral ClubBristol, Connecticut41km
Mindat Locality ID:
260389
Long-form identifier:
mindat:1:2:260389:9
GUID (UUID V4):
5cd89019-0216-46e8-ac1a-1199d3c8ff31


A state-wide map by Pearre (1957) showing old mines and quarries marks the Maltby Lakes mine, but the resolution at its scale is poor. The shafts and prospects are shown a geologic map of the Maltby Lakes in Deasy at al (2015), which maps a hard chlorite-rich epidote-amphibole mylonite around the mines and prospects. This rock and massive milky quartz are abundant in the dumps. Traces of goethite and malachite are present. The locality has never made it into any of the rock hound collecting guides probably because the very small scale workings found little of consequence. Various 19th century references discuss these mines.

Lambert's History of the Colony of New Haven:

In this parish, about twenty years ago (1818), a deposit of galena and silver was found on land now owned by Mr. John Lambert, lying on the old country road. It was discovered by David Lambert, the father of the present owner, by digging in a fox burrow. He obtained a considerable quantity of ore, but having a large farm which required his attention, he did not long continue to work it.


Shepard (1837) says:

...an ochre, rarely embracing portions of undecomposed [pyrite] ore, occurred disseminated through a quartz vein several feet in width, in the central part of the town at Lambert's mine....

Near a place called Lambert's mine, where a surface-accumulation of galena was discovered many years ago, a quartz-vein containing [pyrite], nearly a foot in width, has been worked down to a depth of ten or fifteen feet. Iron-pyrites [pyrite], as was the most abundant ore present, but the yellow copper-pyrites [chalcopyrite] evidently improved as the workings continued. With it were associated variegated copper [bornite], and faint arborizations of native copper. The rock through which the vein cuts is a hard, chloritic trap. The explorations at this place however, are for the present suspended...


The mention of "silver" is typical of galena deposits in the state and does not denote native silver, but potentially (more typically wishfully) argentiferous galena. The location is obscure, but the "old country road" is likely today's state Route 34 (Derby Turnpike) and the "central part of town" at that time was much farther east than at present because West Haven was part of Orange until 1921. (Orange was formed from North Milford and West Haven parish of New Haven in 1822). Thus it may in fact be the same place just west of the Maltby Lakes mentioned by Schairer (1931) and described by Harte (1945), though the dates do not quite match:

Schairer’s Maltby Lakes mine is said to have been operated by an Englishman prior to the Revolutionary War, but being suspected of Tory leanings he was jailed by the Committee of Safety. In 1807 Dr. Eneas Munson took a group of Yale students - Professor Silliman’s class in geology - to study it, and from time to time unavailing efforts were made to lease or purchase the property, until 1852, when it was leased to Nelson H. Gaston of New Haven. Six years later the lease was taken over by “The Orange Copper Mining Company,” with an authorized capital of $50,000 in 2,000 shares of $25.00 each. It is said that several “experts” analysed the ore and made the traditional favorable reports, and $1,500 was spent on tools, buildings and labor, but as with practically all of Connecticut’s mining ventures, other than the capitalization and that the “experts” are said to have made glowing reports, very little is known other than it soon joined the rest of the failures.


Dana (1891) mentions 3 places, though it is difficult to understand the geography with all the discussion of various paths so they have been numbered here:

Passing the causeway south of the northern lake a place may be seen north of the path, shortly before reaching the north-and-south path above mentioned, where a quartz vein was mined for copper ore [1]. The expectant miner - it was soon after the California fever broke out - got nothing except a few flattering specks of ore. A few rods north of the north-and-south path, a branch path goes eastward up to one of Mr. Maltby's lookouts. On the north side of the path near the top, there is another old mine in a quartz vein, and here two shafts were sunk 10 or 12 feet and much quartz thrown out [2], and, it is reported, that one piece of ore as large as the hand was obtained. The ore is the yellow chalcopyrite - of a gold-yellow color. Small pieces are now often found in the broken quartz, especially in the rusted pieces; and besides the chalcopyrite, traces of malachite and azurite are met with and some pyrite. Pure chlorite is found in cavities in the quartz, as in other quartz veins of the park.
On the south shore of the western lake, between it and the Derby road, there is another spot which was once worked for copper [3]. In the many fragments of quartz about the spot, traces of copper ore, and also of the common lead ore, galena, are occasionally found.


He mentions that in 1840 no gold was found in a test of a 40-pound sample from location 3.

Location 1 is a small prospect at 41.305865 -72.982409. Location 2 is the major group of shafts and pits at the coordinates for this mindat page. A series of small shafts and scratch pits following a generally E-W trending quartz vein for a couple of hundred meters. Location 3 is a cluster of small pits at 41.301181 -72.983691, although this is situated south of state Route 34 (the Derby road). If it was north of Route 34 it may have been obliterated by widening of that highway as there is little space between it and the south shore of the western lake.

Select Mineral List Type

Standard Detailed Gallery Strunz Chemical Elements

Mineral List


9 valid minerals.

Detailed Mineral List:

Bornite
Formula: Cu5FeS4
Calcite
Formula: CaCO3
Chalcopyrite
Formula: CuFeS2
'Chlorite Group'
Copper
Formula: Cu
Galena
Formula: PbS
Goethite
Formula: α-Fe3+O(OH)
Malachite
Formula: Cu2(CO3)(OH)2
Pyrite
Formula: FeS2
Quartz
Formula: SiO2
Description: forms the vein matrix

Gallery:

List of minerals arranged by Strunz 10th Edition classification

Group 1 - Elements
Copper1.AA.05Cu
Group 2 - Sulphides and Sulfosalts
Bornite2.BA.15Cu5FeS4
Chalcopyrite2.CB.10aCuFeS2
Galena2.CD.10PbS
Pyrite2.EB.05aFeS2
Group 4 - Oxides and Hydroxides
Goethite4.00.α-Fe3+O(OH)
Quartz4.DA.05SiO2
Group 5 - Nitrates and Carbonates
Calcite5.AB.05CaCO3
Malachite5.BA.10Cu2(CO3)(OH)2
Unclassified Minerals, Rocks, etc.
'Chlorite Group'-

List of minerals for each chemical element

HHydrogen
H MalachiteCu2(CO3)(OH)2
H Goethiteα-Fe3+O(OH)
CCarbon
C MalachiteCu2(CO3)(OH)2
C CalciteCaCO3
OOxygen
O MalachiteCu2(CO3)(OH)2
O QuartzSiO2
O CalciteCaCO3
O Goethiteα-Fe3+O(OH)
SiSilicon
Si QuartzSiO2
SSulfur
S BorniteCu5FeS4
S ChalcopyriteCuFeS2
S PyriteFeS2
S GalenaPbS
CaCalcium
Ca CalciteCaCO3
FeIron
Fe BorniteCu5FeS4
Fe ChalcopyriteCuFeS2
Fe PyriteFeS2
Fe Goethiteα-Fe3+O(OH)
CuCopper
Cu CopperCu
Cu BorniteCu5FeS4
Cu MalachiteCu2(CO3)(OH)2
Cu ChalcopyriteCuFeS2
PbLead
Pb GalenaPbS

Other Regions, Features and Areas containing this locality


This page contains all mineral locality references listed on mindat.org. This does not claim to be a complete list. If you know of more minerals from this site, please register so you can add to our database. This locality information is for reference purposes only. You should never attempt to visit any sites listed in mindat.org without first ensuring that you have the permission of the land and/or mineral rights holders for access and that you are aware of all safety precautions necessary.

References

 
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