The Society’s journal
Ambix is published four times a year in February, May, August, and November. Papers are refereed by an international
editorial board. Its coverage is wide and varied, ranging from studies in exoteric and esoteric alchemy to recent chemistry. Recently, more attention has been given to the history of alchemy, while Ambix continues to provide important reading for historians of chemistry. The presentation of scientific ideas, methods and discoveries is made as non-technical as possible, consistent with academic rigour and scientific accuracy. Extensive
book reviews are published in each issue of
Ambix. Recent special issues include: New Studies on Humphry Davy (May and August 2019); The Royal Typographer and the Alchemist: Willem Silvius and
John Dee (May 2017); From the Library to the Laboratory and Back Again (May 2016); and Chemical Knowledge in Transit (November 2015). In May 2013, 2014, and 2015 three special issues were published on Sites of Chemistry devoted to the eighteenth, nineteenth and twentieth centuries respectively, while the November 2014 special issue concerned Analysis and Synthesis in Medieval and Early Modern Europe. In 2013, the Society launched the series Sources of Alchemy and Chemistry, which provides readers with critical editions and English translations of foundational texts in the history of alchemy and early chemistry. The readership of Ambix is international and includes historians, chemists, philosophers, and scholars in other disciplines. Issues of
Ambix are sent to members and libraries around the world and are also available online free to members through the Society’s website ambix.org. The Society publishes its newsletter Chemical Intelligence twice a year. This publication advertises and reports not only the Society’s events and activities, but also those of other organisations involved in the history of alchemy and chemistry. Chemical Intelligence is distributed to members by email and is made available free to the public online via www.ambix.org. The Society's archive is kept at the
History of Science Museum, Oxford. == Meetings ==