Central Ohio counties under tornado watch
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Officials said three people were inside the home when the tree fell. Two people got out safely while one remained trapped.
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The National Weather Service received more than 20 reports of tornadoes from Arkansas, Missouri and Tennessee through Kentucky, Illinois and Indiana.
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All modes of severe weather will be possible, including another tornado threat.
From fox17
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The National Weather Service in Wilmington forecasts a total 4-6 inches of rainfall through Sunday from storms that will move through central Ohio.
A dangerous and potentially historic flood event is bearing down on 22 million Americans from Arkansas to Ohio this week.
Last night's severe weather kicked off a flood watch in Ohio, but tornadoes can form any time. Here's what to know about them and how they form.
The National Weather Service late Sunday issued a tornado warning for parts of central Ohio as a storm front came through.
The national weather service issues watches and warnings for tornadoes and severe thunderstorms. What's worse? What do they mean?
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Findlay, Hancock County, and a large part of Ohio have been placed under a Tornado Watch until 4 a.m. Thursday. Forecasters say a few tornadoes are likely as severe storms race across the state. 75 mph wind gusts,
INTERACTIVE RADAR | ACTIVE WEATHER ALERTS Sign up for our Newsletters The entire WLKY viewing area is under a tornado watch until 2 a.m. And most of the viewing area is under the "Moderate Risk" category for severe weather,
A Flood Watch was issued for central Ohio through Sunday as some parts could see more than three inches of rainfall this weekend.
Yet again, another round of severe weather is set to threaten the central U.S. with damaging winds, large hail and tornadoes starting late Tuesday and continuing through Thursday.
Damaging winds, large hail, and isolated tornadoes will be possible. The threat may end earlier than the expiration of the watch, depending on the speed of these storms. All northwest Ohio and southeast Michigan counties are under a flood watch.
Strong Winds Strong winds of 55 mph or more can cause significant damage even though no tornado is present. "Downbursts" are columns of air that slam to the earth and spread high winds in many directions. Downbursts can be just as damaging as tornadoes; if such conditions are present, take the same precautions as you would for a tornado.