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Storms will begin to fire late Monday afternoon in the warm sector ahead of a cold front.
From NBC New York
On Tuesday, April 1, the U.S. National Weather Service issued a number of weather advisories and watches for regions of North and South Louisiana.
From Yahoo
The highest risk on Sunday covers a large area from northeastern Texas and northern Louisiana through Mississippi, northwestern Alabama, Illinois, Indiana, Ohio and southern Michigan, potentially aff...
From The New York Times
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Severe storms bringing golf ball-sized hail, strong wind gusts and even the possibility of tornadoes are on the way Tuesday night into Wednesday.
Strong tornadoes are possible near Chicago, while blizzard conditions have been blasting Nebraska and Kansas. Farther south, Oklahoma and Texas are facing critical wildfire danger.
According to Livonia Police Department Chief Landon Landry, the tanker caught fire on Reliable Lane near U.S. 190.
At least one person is dead after a swath of severe weather ripped across a section of the United States that stretches from Michigan's Upper Peninsula to Texas, spawning tornadoes, damaging straight line winds and hail.
According to the National Weather Service in Wilmington, warm temperatures, gusty winds, and low dew points will cause low relative humidity Wednesday afternoon, leading to possible fire concerns.
Spring is off to a furious start for several parts of the country after a blizzard dumped over a foot of snow and tornadoes raced through neighborhoods in the Midwest as the same storm system moves east to drench the East Coast. Tens of millions of people woke up to damage in the Midwest on Thursday morning, the first official day of spring.
A weather front that brought heavy downpours and hail to Kansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma on Saturday was growing more dangerous Sunday.
forecasters warned of a return of critical fire weather conditions on Thursday. Severe thunderstorms were possible in central Illinois with risks of hail, strong wind and tornadoes. Much of ...
The weather service Storm Prediction Center's latest guidance shows that the biggest risk of convective storms, the type of severe storms that can produce hail and tornadoes, includes areas near Enid and Stillwater in north-central Oklahoma.