More than 30 million Americans across the nation's northern tier were under winter weather advisories or warnings Wednesday while tornadoes swept the South as a deadly winter storm continued its damaging march through the country.
A line of tornadoes and severe storms rolling through Oklahoma, Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama and Florida was blamed for at least two deaths and injuring dozens. Blizzard conditions forced closures of scores of interstates and other roads in Colorado, Wyoming, Nebraska, Kansas, South Dakota and North Dakota.
"A powerful system continues to produce heavy snow, blizzard conditions, and areas with a wintry mix across the north and central Plains," the National Weather Service said in an ominous alert Tuesday night. "Severe storms with all hazards, including intense tornadoes, and heavy to excessive rain that could cause flash flooding can be expected across the Deep and Middle South."
In Louisiana, New Iberia police said Wednesday that a tornado had touched down, several homes were damaged and people are trapped.
"Rescue efforts are underway. We ask that all citizens please avoid the area," police Captain Leland Lassiter said. "We do have power lines that are down and live across the roads and in yards."
Tornadoes in Louisiana, Mississippi
Elsewhere in Louisiana, the body of 8-year-old Nikolus Little was found hours after a tornado destroyed his Keithville home 10 miles south of Shreveport, the Caddo Parish Sheriff’s office said Wednesday. A few hours later, the body of his mother, Yoshiko Smith, 30, was found a block away under tornado debris. An adult male was hospitalized, the sheriff's office said in a Facebook post
In Farmerville, Louisiana, the Union Parish Sheriff's Office told KNOE-TV that about 25 people were injured, some critically, after a tornado leveled a neighborhood. Tiyia Stringfellow, her boyfriend and two young children were in her Farmerville apartment when the tornado struck.
“We were in the kitchen closet. All we heard was whistling, and my boyfriend got up to look outside of the window and he (saw) the tornado," she told CNN. "The whole house was shaking and I (saw) my roof cave in, and the house went dark."
In Mississippi, a line of severe storms was generating tornadoes Wednesday, the National Weather Service office in Jackson warned.
"A confirmed, large and extremely dangerous tornado was located near Forest, moving northeast at 35 mph," the office said in one of many warning statements. "This is a particularly dangerous situation. Take cover now!"
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Several injured as tornadoes rock Texas
In Texas, the weather service in Fort Worth said Wednesday that eight tornadoes were confirmed in the storms that struck Tuesday and about four more confirmations were likely. One of the tornadoes, rated an EF-2, tracked through Wise County Tuesday morning producing winds up to 125 mph, the office said.
In Grapevine, 20 miles northwest of Dallas, at least five people were injured, and a Sam's Club, a Walmart and the Grapevine Mills Mall were among businesses damaged, police said. A least two people were reported injured in Decatur, Texas, about 70 miles northwest of Dallas, one when wind overturned a vehicle and another by flying debris.
"The risk for flash flooding and severe weather continues for the South Wednesday," weather service meteorologist Bryan Putnam said.
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North pounded by heavy snow, ice for parts of Northeast
Putnam said the Northern High Plains, where the snow began Tuesday, could end up with up to 30 inches through Thursday. Strong, gusty northerly winds upwards of 45 to 55 mph will continue to produce blizzard conditions and have a "significant" impact on travel, he said. Expect long stretches of most roads, including parts of the major interstates I-80, I-90, and I-94, to remain closed in the region, he added.
As the week comes to an end, winter will ramp up in the Northeast, with accumulating snow and freezing rain likely. The forecast calls for freezing rain totals up to a quarter of an inch in parts of Virginia, West Virginia, Maryland and Pennsylvania.
The snow threat deepens further north into New York, with 4 to 8 inches, locally higher at elevation in the mountains. The snowfall will continue and move further north into New England by Friday, the weather service said.
Closer to the coast, rain mixed with freezing rain, sleet, and snow could make the morning commute along the I-95 corridor difficult Thursday morning, according to forecasters.
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