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Mar 2, 2012

U.S. News: Forecasters: Fast-moving, strong and long-track tornadoes may hit Midwest

U.S. News
Stories from NBC reporters around the country.
thumbnail Forecasters: Fast-moving, strong and long-track tornadoes may hit Midwest
Mar 2nd 2012, 15:36

By msnbc.com news services

Two days after a slew of severe weather killed 13 people across the Midwest and South, a second wave of storms and possible tornadoes are set to hit from Louisiana to Ohio. TODAY's Al Roker reports.

People in Tennessee, Kentucky and Indiana were bracing Friday for a few potential "strong, long-track tornadoes," while others in a larger swath from Alabama north to Ohio should expect severe storms and twisters, meteorologists say.

The strongest tornadoes were expected to hit southern Indiana, central Kentucky and northern-middle Tennessee later Friday, according to the National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center.


Storms will develop ahead of a cold front by midday Friday along with strong winds, resulting in "a favorable setup for fast-moving tornadic storms capable of producing long-track/damaging tornadoes in the high risk area," the center said.

Multiple severe storms with a few tornadoes will be possible in Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia, though the conditions for twisters will not be quite as favorable, the center said.

"The unfortunate truth about spring weather patterns is they can lead to repeated severe outbreaks, sometimes in areas that were already hard hit," wrote Jonathan Erdman, a senior meteorologist for weather.com. "Such a situation is looking to unfold in parts of the Ohio, mid-Mississippi, and Tennessee Valleys Friday."

Kera Wise was one of those picking up the pieces after a tornado struck Harrisburg, Ill., early Wednesday. She was quickly scouring for keepsakes from her aunt and uncle's ruined home ahead of the forecasts for more severe weather, though by early Friday it seemed the town had escaped any major overnight storms unscathed.

"You just keep thinking, 'God, please don't let there be another tornado,'" Wise, 35, whose aunt and uncle remained hospitalized in neighboring Indiana, told The Associated Press.

The storm system earlier this week in the Midwest and South killed 13 people in four states.

The National Weather Service said the states most likely to experience stormy weather are: Alabama, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Mississippi, Ohio and Tennessee.

In the Cincinnati area, News 5 meteorologists said there would be two rounds of storms -- the first likely to contain hail and the second with the potential for high winds and a threat of tornadoes.

Storms will develop later Friday in central Tennessee, packing a "high risk for tornadoes, along with a very high risk for wind, hail and localized flooding," according to WSMV.

"There's a high potential for a couple of tornadoes to not only touchdown but stay on the ground once they touchdown in Middle Tennessee," said 4WARN Meteorologist Paul Heggen.

In the Louisville area, where four tornadoes struck on Wednesday, meteorologists at WLKY.com warned about "frequent cloud to ground lightning, heavy rain" and "half inch hail" expected with the thunderstorms.

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