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82_28 wrote: Sometimes I wonder if things like this, the super-volcano of Yellowstone, the proclivity for the west coast to meet with seismic disaster is why the continental USA remained sparsely populated for so many prehistoric years.
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- Another storm system charges out of the Rocky Mountains and crosses through the central and southern Plains later today and Wednesday
- The storm plows into a very warm and humid air mass in the central and southern Plains causing severe thunderstorms to develop
- Severe thunderstorms should first develop in western or central Oklahoma later this afternoon and develop southward into north-central Texas by early evening
- During the evening the activity moves through eastern Oklahoma, northeast Texas and western Arkansas
- Strong tornadoes, damaging wind gusts and very large hail are possible
- Other severe thunderstorms are possible in Tennessee and western and northern North Carolina this afternoon and evening
- Those storms could produce strong wind gusts, hail and isolated tornadoes
- Hot temperatures continue over the entire region with highs mostly in the upper 80s to upper 90s
- Windy conditions occur in far western Oklahoma and western Texas with sustained winds of 15 to 30 mph and gusts over 50 mph possible
- A few areas of western Texas could have sustained winds of 25 to 50 mph with gusts over 70 mph from the middle afternoon through the early evening hours
Okla. hit by tornado as Joplin braces
A large tornado touched down in western Oklahoma Tuesday as the city of Joplin in southwestern Missouri — already reeling from the deadliest tornado to strike the United States in more than 60 years — braced for a second punch.
A single twister in Joplin on Sunday killed at least 117 people. That's the highest toll from one tornado since accurate record-keeping began, surpassing the 116 people who were killed in a single twister in Flint, Mich., on April 27, 1953.
And the Joplin figure is expected to rise. Preliminary estimates say the twister was an EF4 on the Fujita scale — the second-highest rating assigned to tornadoes based on the damage they cause.
The National Weather Service reported the tornado touched down Tuesday north of Canton, about 110 kilometres northwest of Oklahoma City, and moved east/northeast.
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