Midwest, In South and Severe Weather
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Severe storms slammed parts of the Midwest on March 10 and 11, leaving behind a trail of uprooted trees and smashed cars.
The Midwest is in the middle of what meteorologists are calling the most "impactful severe weather outbreak so far this year.”
At least two people were killed and several were injured in the severe storm on Tuesday that heavily damaged areas of Illinois and Indiana.
At least two people are dead in Indiana after severe storms swept across the country, unleashing devastating tornadoes in the central U.S.
We followed along Tuesday as violent storms unleashed tornadoes, large hail and damaging winds across parts of the Plains, Midwest and South.
Officials say several tornadoes have torn through parts of Illinois and Indiana, downing trees and power lines in an area south of Chicago and overwhelming the 911 center with emergency calls.
The first full week of meteorological spring brought a severe weather threat to the Central U.S. with 24 confirmed tornadoes and multiple fatalities.
Life-threatening storms erupted across the Midwest and Southern Plains Tuesday, hurling grapefruit-size hail, drenching downpours that triggered dangerous flooding, and spawning powerful tornadoes — leaving a trail of widespread destruction.