Severe storms with damaging winds, tornadoes, hail and flooding are all possible Wednesday night into Thursday morning.
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FOX Weather on MSNLive storm tracker: Severe weather maps, flooding forecasts, radars and moreA multiple-day severe weather and "generational" flash flooding threat is pummeling the Ohio, Tennessee and Mississippi Valleys with an onslaught of tornadoes, damaging winds and forecasts of more than a foot of rain,
After scattered rain and downpours on-and-off for your Friday, watch for a line of severe wind storms after 10 p.m. tonight. A stray tornado is possible for Indiana.
A tornado warning has been issued for four Wiregrass counties as severe weather moves through the area. Watch the livestream in the player above as the WDHN First Alert Storm Team tracks severe weather in the Wiregrass.
An isolated shower or storm is possible around 8 to 11 p.m. What’s next? Cooler Friday with a few showers and storms possible. Saturday may end up mostly dry, then higher rain chances Sunday afternoon and night.
At least seven people are known to have died — five in Tennessee, one in Indiana and one in Missouri — and 13 have been injured as severe weather caused devastation across a huge swath of the country from the Midwest to the mid-South.
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Get your FOX 47 Storm Shield Weather Forecast here. Severe weather remains a possibility this evening as thunderstorms continue to move through.
On Your Side Meteorologist Jim Castillo will be monitoring the text line and answering your questions. Text us at 314-444-5355.
A wintry mix in northern Lower Michigan will change to rain by noon. For southern Lower Michigan look for numerous periods of showers and thunderstorms. The thunderstorms could be severe in the afternoon or evening.
KENTUCKY, USA — Severe weather is once again taking aim at Kentucky and southern Indiana on Wednesday. Portions of western Kentucky are under a high risk for severe weather while the rest of the state is under a moderate risk, including Louisville, or an enhanced risk.
Deadly storms that have caused widespread damage across the central U.S. were still bearing down on much of the country Thursday, leaving hundreds of thousands without power and putting millions under tornado watches.