2C-T-7

2C-T-7 (Sulfurous Samadhi) is a psychedelic phenethylamine presumably first synthesized in 1986 by Alexander Shulgin, sometimes used as an entheogen; it 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

Psychedelic phenethylamines edit

{2C-B} {2C-C} {2C-D} {2C-E} {2C-G} {2C-I} {2C-N} {2C-P} {2C-T-2} {2C-T-21} {2C-T-4} {2C-T-7} {2C-T-8} {3C-E} {3C-P} {Br-DFLY} {DOB} {DOI} {DOM} {Escaline} {MDA} {Mescaline} {TMA}

See also

External links

pl:2C-T-7