how effective are carbon filters available at home?

I wonder if it would be feasible to do an experiment, for example, to filter the rain water, creek water, and/or tap water sample through a generally available carbon filter at home (e.g. something like a BRITA filter), and compare the result against the unfiltered water sample. If such could be done and published as supplement to the rain and tap water result, that would be great.

Yes, great idea!

I second that. What a great idea! A lot of people use Brita filters anyway (for taste reasons), and it would be nice to just have that peace of mind (even if the risks are infinitesimal). :)

carbon useless for added chloramine and fluoride

In addition to the radiation issue in our tap water, chloramine and fluoride, both toxic chemicals, are added to our local tap water, and are difficult to filter out. Carbon filters like the Brita cartridges don't work on those.

For info about chloramine, see www.chloramine.org
For info about fluoride, see www.fluoridealert.org

That is a great idea!

If you guys could retest water after filtering that would be awesome.

And can you filter MILK?

If we filter milk, the

If we filter milk, the output will be very close to water :)