"For much of the 20th century, carbon tetrachloride was regarded as a miracle chemical: It was used to put out fires, degrease machines, kill bugs, dry-clean clothing and even help stamp collectors detect forgeries.
From the mid-1960s through the mid-1980s, most of those uses were discontinued for health and safety reasons. ...
Despite all of these efforts to eliminate carbon tetrachloride -- classified by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency as a probable human carcinogen and known to damage the liver, kidneys and brain -- it still shows up at elevated levels around the world, scientists say. That's a testament, they say, to its past widespread use and its tough-as-nails persistence.
USA TODAY found it outside 70 of 95 schools in 30 states it monitored for a week last fall ... yet there were no obvious industrial sources to explain the readings."
James Bruggers reports for USA TODAY May 20, 2009.
"Toxic 'Carbon Tet' Lingers in Air Near Schools"
Source: USA TODAY, 05/21/2009