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The Simple Plant Isoquinolines

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The Simple Plant Isoquinolines
AuthorAlexander T. Shulgin, Wendy E. Perry
LanguageEnglish
SubjectIsoquinoline and tetrahydroisoquinoline alkaloids
PublisherTransform Press
Publication date
2002
Publication placeUnited States
Pages624 pages
ISBN9780963009623
OCLC51006569
Websitehttps://transformpress.com/publications/

The Simple Plant Isoquinolines is a 2002 book written by Alexander Shulgin and Wendy Perry about isoquinoline and tetrahydroisoquinoline alkaloids, for instance the various cyclized phenethylamine mescaline analogues found in many cactus species.[1][2][3] It was published by Transform Press.[1][2][3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Sumnall HR, Evans-Brown M, McVeigh J (2011). "Social, policy, and public health perspectives on new psychoactive substances". Drug Test Anal. 3 (7–8): 515–523. doi:10.1002/dta.310. PMID 21744515. Shulgin (and Perry's) less well known The Simple Plant Isoquinolines[118] exhaustively details another class of potentially psychoactive alkaloids, the isoquinolines found in, amongst other materials, cacti such as Lophophora williamsii and Papaver somniferum, better known as the opium poppy. [...] [118] A. Shulgin, W. E. Perry. The Simple Plant Isoquinolines, Transform Press: Berkley, CA, 2002.
  2. ^ a b Clark, Jaysen M. (2008). "The San Pedro Long Dance: Transpersonal aspects of a contemporary entheogenic ritual". ProQuest. Retrieved 21 May 2025. For those interested in the chemistry of San Pedro, Shulgin and Perry's recent publication The Simple Plant Isoquinolines (2002) was an attempt at both sorting through the complex taxonomy of several different cacti and isolating the various chemical constituents within them..
  3. ^ a b Shulgin, Alexander Theodore; Perry, Wendy E. (2002). The Simple Plant Isoquinolines. Transform Press. ISBN 978-0-9630096-2-3. OCLC 51006569. OL 8521520M.