Tornadoes
feared as severe storm tears through Plains, heads for South
The
National Weather Service issued tornado watches and severe
thunderstorm warnings for parts of Oklahoma and Texas early Tuesday
as a line of severe weather marched from the Southern Plains toward
the southern Ohio Valley.
NBC,
29
January, 2013
Dangerous
lightning, hail up to an inch in diameter and wind gusts of 70 mph
were considered most likely in the tornado-watch area, which extended
from Hardeman County, Texas, to Osage County, Okla.
About
6:30 a.m. ET, the NWS was monitoring a severe thunderstorm moving at
about 55 mph through Oklahoma, issuing warnings for people to take
cover as it approached.
Additionally,
the weather service said there was the potential for a “significant,
severe weather event” from Louisiana and Arkansas to Mississippi
and southwest Tennessee.
Tornadoes,
some of them strong, were also possible in Arkansas, northern
Louisiana, southeastern Missouri, western Mississippi and
southwestern Tennessee, the NWS added.
Weather.com
meteorologist Kevin Roth said that “severe thunderstorms are
expected to develop in central Oklahoma … during the morning and
form into a squall line and march toward the middle and lower
Mississippi Valley.”
“Tuesday
night the squall line is expected to stretch from the mid-Ohio Valley
to the central Gulf Coast,” he added.
Roth
said that on Wednesday the threat area was expected to include the
upper Ohio Valley, Tennessee Valley, Southeast and Mid-Atlantic.
“Damaging
wind gusts are the primary threat, but isolated tornadoes and hail
are also possible,” he said.
Meanwhile,
the same storm was bringing heavy rain to the Midwest and Great
Lakes, Roth added.
“Rainfall
of 1 to 3 inches is possible from Missouri to Michigan and could
cause some flooding,” he said, noting flood watches had been posted
from eastern Illinois to southern Michigan.
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