2C-t-7

2C-T-7 is a psychedelic entheogen presumably first synthesized in 1986 by Alexander Shulgin, and has structural and pharmacodynamic properties similar to the drugs Mescaline, MDMA, and 2C-B. In Shulgin's book PiHKAL (Phenethylamines I Have Known and Loved), the dosage range is listed as 10 to 30 mg. Chemically 2C-T-7 is 4-propylthio-2,5-dimethoxyphenethylamine, with the formula C12H21O2NS. 2C-T-7 has been sold on the street under the names "Blue Mystic" and "Tweetybird Mescaline". Around the year 2000, 2C-T-7 began to change from an obscure chemical to a drug used at parties and clubs in North America and Europe as it became available through a number of grey-market commercial vendors. There have been at least three reported deaths related 2C-T-7 use, and in January of 2002, Rolling Stone Magazine published an article about 2C-T-7 entitled "The New (legal) Killer Drug". On September 20, 2002, 2C-T-7 was classified as a Schedule I substance in the United States by an emergency ruling by the DEA.

Categorization

   

See also

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
sophie chotek
the beta band
isaac mizrahi
folketing
international rose test garden
marston, oxfordshire
u.s. highway 75
queens county
renaissance tower
deryck cooke
u.s. highway 175
outerbridge crossing
bye bye birdie
malafrena
coupled cluster
worker communist party
quorthon
emir kusturica
u.s. highway 77
john alexander waddell
george porteous
blood poisoning
bank one center
72 hours: true crime
malacostraca
plattenbau
frederick ruckstull
new acropolis
literary machines
peyton manning
programmer's stone
hmg
message oriented middleware
air caledonie
serious fraud office
claudie haigner
export credits guarantee department
british council
food standards agency
baltic shield
arne nss jr.
grifo
mohammad reza khatami
harry goz