Sunday, as the frontal system over the nation's heartland shifts east, the severe threat also shifts east into the Mississippi and Lower Ohio Valleys, including St. Louis, Chicago, and Memphis. Again, large hail and damaging straight-line winds are the primary threats. However, a few tornadoes cannot be ruled out.
Forecast Sunday
Forecast Monday
Monday will bring the chance for severe thunderstorms to a broad zone taking in parts of the Great Lakes, Northeast, Mid-Atlantic, Ohio and Tennessee Valleys and the central and southern Appalachians. Although it's a large area, the severe weather within the zone will likely be spotty, again mainly consisting of large hail and damaging straight-line wind gusts.
We have all the maps and information you need to track severe weather below, including watches and warnings, and radar.
We also have links to see what your typical climatological tornado risk is, as well as links to our iWitness photo/video galleries and our Notify! severe alerts service.
Severe Weather Ticker: Latest Updates
All tornado warnings, along with relevant tweets from The Weather Channel and local National Weather Service offices in current threat areas, will appear here. Information updates automatically; no need to reload or refresh your browser. Time stamps on the left are in Eastern time; subtract one hour for Central time and two hours for Mountain time.
Saturday, severe thunderstorms will ignite over the nation's heartland, from eastern Nebraska and western Iowa into northwest Missouri, Kansas, western Oklahoma and the Texas Panhandle, includingOmaha, Kansas City, Wichita, and Amarillo.
Forecast Saturday
Forecast Sunday
Damaging straight-line winds and large hail are the primary threats. While the tornado threat is generally low, parts of eastern Nebraska, western Iowa and northeast Kansas have the highest chance of a few tornadoes.
Sunday, as the frontal system shifts east, the severe threat also shifts into the Mississippi and Lower Ohio Valleys, including St. Louis, Chicago, and Memphis. Again, large hail and damaging straight-line winds are the primary threats, however a few tornadoes cannot be ruled out.
We have all the maps and information you need to track severe weather below, watches and warnings, and radar.
We also have links to see what your typical climatological tornado risk is, as well as links to our iWitness photo/video galleries and our Notify! severe alerts service.
Severe Weather Ticker: Latest Updates
All tornado warnings, along with relevant tweets from The Weather Channel and local National Weather Service offices in current threat areas, will appear here. Information updates automatically; no need to reload or refresh your browser. Time stamps on the left are in Central time; add one hour for Eastern and subtract one hour for Mountain time.
Severe Alerts
Active Watches and Warnings
See the latest watches and warnings across the nation using our clickable severe weather alerts map.
Regional alert zooms:
Current Radar
Track the Storms in Your Area
Track the severe thunderstorms using ourinteractive radar map.
You can also see how much rain has fallen by clicking on the 24-hour rainfall interactive map.
Does anyone remember these Tropical Updates from 2009 and 2010?
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