Deadly flooding in South and Midwest
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CBS News |
At least 16 people were confirmed dead early Sunday, as a storm system sweeping parts of the South and Midwest brought tornado and flash flood warnings overnight.
Los Angeles Times |
Days of unrelenting heavy rain and storms that killed at least 18 people worsened flooding as some rivers rose to near-record levels and inundated towns across an already saturated U.S. South and par...
Seattle Times |
Flooding worsened across the U.S. South and Midwest, threatening communities already waterlogged and badly damaged by days of heavy rain and storms that killed at least 23 people.
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FOX Weather on MSNSee it: Before-and-after satellite images show deadly reach of historic flooding in Mississippi, Ohio valleysCommunities across the Mississippi and Ohio valleys are continuing to experience catastrophic and deadly flooding in the wake of a nearly two-week-long stretch of extreme weather from the Midwest to the Southeast,
Significant severe weather and life-threatening flash flooding continue to impact much of the mid-South up through the Ohio River Valley.
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AccuWeather on MSNRiver flooding to persist for days, weeks following ‘1-in-1,000-year' rain eventAs waters recede along small streams and secondary rivers, flooding is just getting underway along the largest rivers and related problems may last well into the spring.
At least 18 people have died in what the National Weather Service (NWS) has called "catastrophic flooding" that hit the South and Midwest. The flooding came with storms caused by an atmospheric river that the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) forecast would hit the region on Wednesday.
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America’s oldest continuously operating distillery is temporarily closed because of major flooding in Kentucky this week.
Some of the nation's worst flooding since Hurricane Helene last fall is continuing to unfold in the central U.S. this week.
A deadly barrage of severe weather, tornadoes and torrential rain has come to an end, but the danger is far from over in communities across the Midwest and South as angry rivers continue to rise, forcing families from their homes.
L ITTLE ROCK, Ark. — Parts of the South and Midwest, still reeling from violent storms, tornadoes and flooding that have killed more than a dozen people, face new flooding and tornado warnings that forecasters said could last for days.
COLUMBUS, MISS. (WTVA) — Authorities evacuated several families in Lowndes County because of flood waters. The rising water stemmed from weekend storms and heavy rains throughout Mississippi. Lowndes County Emergency Management Agency Director Cindy Lawrence said several evacuations happened earlier this week in the Masonic subdivision.