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Juno (psychedelic)

Pharmaceutical compound From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

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Juno, also known as 4,6-dimethyl-2,5-dimethoxyamphetamine or as 6-methyl-DOM, is a possible psychedelic drug of the phenethylamine, amphetamine, and DOx families related to DOM.[1][2][3] It is the 6-methyl derivative of DOM and a positional isomer of Ganesha (3-methyl-DOM).[1][2][3] The drug is one of Alexander Shulgin's "ten classic ladies", a series of methylated DOM analogues.[1][3] DOM, Ganesha, and DOTMA (Julia; 3,6-dimethyl-DOM) are all known to be active psychedelics, so Juno is expected to be an active psychedelic as well, but has not yet been tested.[1][2] Juno was first described by Shulgin in his 1991 book PiHKAL (Phenethylamines I Have Known and Loved).[1] He shared in PiHKAL that he had had Juno on a shelf in his lab for almost 14 years but had never gotten around to trying it.[1]

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