On Friday at 4:17 p.m. the NWS Fort Worth TX issued an updated tornado watch in effect until 9 p.m. The watch is for Bell, ...
Severe storms and tornadoes are possible in Texas later Wednesday, from Dallas-Fort Worth to Austin-San Antonio, as a cold front sweeps through U.S.
North Texas is at risk for severe weather until Monday evening. This weather could produce quarter-size hail, winds up to 70 mph, localized flooding and an isolated tornado, CBS News reports.
A tornado warning has been issued across Texas and Oklahoma, with the National Weather Service (NWS) warning residents to take cover immediately. The Texan counties currently under a tornado watch ...
The Storm Prediction Center placed a level 2-3 risk across North Texas for Monday ... produce both damaging wind gusts and brief, spin-up tornadoes along the leading edge). The best estimation ...
KXAN dug through the data to find out when and where tornadoes are most common in Texas. NOAA data shows 9,890 tornadoes were reported statewide between January 1950 and July 2024, the most recent ...
Read more on our AI policy here. On Monday at 2:50 p.m. the NWS Fort Worth TX issued an updated tornado watch in effect until 6 p.m. The watch is for Collin, Dallas, Delta, Ellis, Fannin ...
The Tornado Watch that was in effect for parts of North Texas has been CANCELLED. Lingering showers and storms will continue into Monday night from DFW to the east, but the severe threat is very low.
A slew of weather warnings were in place for northeastern Texas and eastern Oklahoma on Monday, including a tornado warning, tornado watch, severe thunderstorm warning and various flood-related ...
Most of the remainder of north Texas and Oklahoma are included in a Level 2 risk. Even outside of any tornado risk, storms are forecast to bring damaging, straight-line winds and perhaps some ...
From reproductive rights to climate change to Big Tech, The Independent is on the ground when the story is developing. Whether it's investigating the financials of Elon Musk's pro-Trump PAC or ...
and strong tornadoes rated EF2 or higher, with the highest risk in eastern Kansas, far northwest Missouri, and northeast Oklahoma, though Texas is likely to experience some residual effects.