I have had some spare time to make up some theoretical chemistry about cactus to help people learn about alkaloid identification. This is for educational purposes only.
Extraction:
A/B (acetic acid acid NaOH base). Defat with xylene. Extract basic solution 5 or so times with CHCl3. Each CHCl3 rinse was rinse 2x with 1M HCl which was pooled and dried.
GC-MS:
We won't get into the instrument specifications. 6 mg crude HCl extract rebasified with 1mL 1M NaOH and extracted into 1mL toluene which was separated and rinsed 1mL water to remove base (base damages GC columns). 3ul injected into instrument.
4 peaks were present. (M+ is short for molecular ion. m/z means mass to charge ratio but its basically the mass of the ions that are present. base = base peak which is largest peak in spectrum often characteristic ion for compounds).
Mescaline major: m/z 211 (M+), 183(B), 167, 148, 107, 77.
Putative identification:
3,4-dimethoxyphenylethylamine: m/z 181 (M+), 152 (base), 137, 107, 91 and 77.
anhalinine: m/z 223 (M+), 222 (base), 208, 179, 151, 107, 77.
1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline, 6,7,8-trimethoxy-1-methyl: m/z 237 (M+), 236, 222 (base), 207, 192, 161, 133.
Part two SWIM will think about what might happen if you rinse the crude material with acetone and IPA.
3,4-dimethoxyphenylethylamine has been reported in San pedro. The other two have been reported in cacti but SWIM is not sure if specifically san pedro. Its tough to dig through the references many are very old and hard to find. Correction: All the above except 1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline, 6,7,8-trimethoxy-1-methyl have been reported in T. pachanoi. That ID could be something else perhaps or it could be correct. Impossible to say without references or more data.