Possible Tornadoes Touch Down in Oklahoma, Indiana as 54 Million Americans Face Wild Weather
54 million Americans are in the path of wild weather.
-- Destructive tornadoes and giant hail are headed towards the Plains states, including Oklahoma, Texas and Kansas.
On Tuesday evening, the National Weather Service reported a possible tornado on the ground northeast of Oklahoma City, near the town of Arcadia.
ABC Oklahoma City affiliate KOCO-5 also reported that more than 16,000 households were without power in the metro Oklahoma City area.
And in Evansville, Indiana, there were also reports of a tornado touching down. Sgt. Jason Cullum with the Evansville Police Department, said there are 5,000 households without power, according to the local power company. Damage in the area includes a tree that fell on a house, power poles down, and a tree falling onto power lines and then onto a school bus.
As one storm system moves towards the Northeast and a second, stronger one hits the Midwest tonight, there are altogether 54 million people in the path of the wild weather.
In the Northeast, stormy weather is moving to the Mid-Atlantic, where a severe thunderstorm watch has been issued from Pennsylvania to Maryland to Northwest New Jersey. In Scranton, Pennsylvania, there was a 48 mph wind gust with pea-sized hail. The Northeast's storms will continue through the evening before clearing out tonight.
Meanwhile, the second storm system is moving east out of the Rockies. Strong tornadoes, large hail and damaging winds are expected tonight in the Midwest, from cities as far north as Lincoln, Wichita, St. Louis and Kansas City, to as far south as Oklahoma City, Dallas, Waco and San Antonio.
A Tornado Watch was issued this afternoon stretching from San Angelo, Texas, up to Tulsa, Oklahoma, that will last until midnight CST. This is a rare “Particularly Dangerous Situation” where several intense and long-track tornadoes are possible. The area may also face huge hail -- larger than 4 inches -- and damaging wind gusts up to 80 miles per hour.
Another Tornado Watch covers eastern Kansas and southern Nebraska. Several tornadoes, some strong, are likely, along with large hail over 3 inches and damaging wind gusts up to 70 mph. That Tornado Watch expires at 9 p.m. CST.
Officials even ordered aircraft evacuations at Kansas' McConnell Air Force Base to avoid potential damage, The Associated Press reported.
As the storm loomed, photos captured the eerie skies in Kansas City...
... and St. Louis:
Then, an hour later in St. Louis, the rain and wind arrived:
The long line of damaging storms is expected to stretch from Kansas City and Wichita south toward Dallas by midnight, and then continue east overnight.