See where severe storms will hit in US
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The News & Observer |
The storm may reach the Triangle around 3 p.m. and could continue until 10 p.m., according to the National Weather Service in Raleigh.
CNN |
Roughly 170 million people from Illinois to eastern Texas and beyond could be affected over the next two days, as unseasonably warm air collides with a powerful cold front.
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After severe weather hit Ohio last night, the National Weather Service is looking at two areas in Southwest Ohio for tornado damage. Here's where.
More than 400,000 homes and businesses in five states were without power Monday in the latest bout of severe weather that has left at least 2 dead.
Severe weather in the Tri-State Sunday night into Monday morning brought a tornado to Floyd and Pike counties in Kentucky. While the National Weather Service has not yet been on the ground to officially confirm the tornado and determine its strength,
The Chicago branch of the National Weather Service tweeted out: "The potential for severe weather returns as early as Tuesday night (threat level 1 and 2 of 5) as multiple waves of storms life across the area, mainly after midnight. Large hail, gusty winds and lightning are the main hazards of the storm."
Severe storms with damaging wind, hail and possibly tornadoes are expected to hit Louisville Sunday evening, according to the National Weather Service
All of the forecast data continues to be very consistent on timing, strength and location of strong thunderstorms today. Here's a look at what we can expect across Lower Michigan in terms of severe thunderstorms.
ST. CLAIR TOWNSHIP, Ohio (WXIX) - Strong storms packing heavy rain, lightning, thunder and high winds downed trees across the Tri-State and caused some structural damage, according to county dispatchers and the National Weather Service in Wilmington.
An NWS official said a survey crew in Louisville's Fairdale neighborhood found damage consistent with at least an EF-1 tornado. It had wind speeds estimated around 90 mph. That survey remains ongoing. Preliminary EF-1 tornado damage seen in Louisville's Fairdale neighborhood after severe storms Sunday night. | March 31, 2025
At least one person was killed Sunday after severe weather battered the central U.S. The storms, which spanned from the southern Great Lakes region to as far south as Texas and Louisiana, packed destructive wind gusts, large hail and tornadoes.