flooding, severe weather
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At least 16 people have been killed in a wide swath of violent storms, flooding and tornadoes that hit the South and Midwest.
From The Press Democrat
Days of unrelenting heavy rain and storms that killed at least 18 people worsened flooding as some rivers rose to near-record levels and inundated towns across an already saturated U.S. South and par...
From Los Angeles Times
At least 21 people have died in last week's storms that wreaked havoc over the Midwest and Mid-South and later turned east.
From NBC News
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Four years after flood waters swept through Humphreys County, killing 19 in the small town of Waverly, flash floods threaten the community once again.
In 2011, water rose so rapidly that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers had to blast a hole in levees along Mississippi River farmland in rural southern Missouri in a last-ditch effort to avoid an uncontrolled breach of the levees further downstream in Memphis, Baton Rouge, and New Orleans.
Rivers rose and flooding worsened Sunday across the U.S. South and Midwest, threatening communities already waterlogged and badly damaged by days of heavy rain and wind that killed at least 18 people. From Texas to Ohio, utilities scrambled to shut off power and gas, while cities closed roads and deployed sandbags to protect homes and businesses.
Storms ripped through Middle Tennessee Wednesday night and the rain is still coming, raising concerns of flooding on roads.
Flooding is the major concern for communities in Tennessee as heavy rain lingers. Find out where rivers are flooding with our flood map.
Another round of torrential rain and flash flooding came Saturday for parts of the South and Midwest already heavily waterlogged by days of severe storms that also spawned some deadly tornadoes.
Another wave of torrential rain and flash flooding hit parts of the South and Midwest, compounding the devastation from days of severe storms that have already left several areas waterlogged and produced deadly tornadoes.
4don MSN
Portions of West and Middle Tennessee could see tornadoes and flash flooding through the weekend. Here's what you need to know.
Middle and West Tennessee are predicted to see inches of rain, flash flooding, hail and possibly tornadoes. "Should the amount of rain occur that we anticipate over the middle of the nation, it would exceed the 500 to 1,000-year average," AccuWeather ...