LITTLE ROCK, Ark. – Tens of millions of people from Texas to Indiana faced a severe weather threat on Saturday, with numerous thunderstorms spawning damaging wind gusts, hail and even reports of tornadoes.
The extreme weather was the result of warm, humid air surging to the north from the Gulf into the Ark-La-Tex region, as well as into the Mississippi Valley and Midwest.
In addition, increasing instability in the atmosphere allowed for the development of supercell thunderstorms.
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Two reported tornadoes downed trees near Bismarck, Arkansas, as limited instability and cloud cover allowed for only a few severe storms to develop across parts of the Mississippi Valley and the Southeast on Saturday.
A video recorded in Ferndale, Arkansas, on Saturday, showed torrential rain falling as the storms swept across that region in the afternoon hours.
Loud claps of thunder could also be heard as rain was falling from the sky.
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The National Weather Service measured winds in Oklahoma reaching up to 60 mph, along with hail measured 1 inch in diameter outside of Tulsa, Oklahoma. Damaging winds downed trees and power lines near Shreveport, Louisiana.
Another video recorded near Tallulah, Louisiana, shows lightning illuminating the night sky as the thunderstorms raced across the area.
And in Indiana, a video recorded in the Nappanee area showed a massive wall cloud swirling above a field as the storms moved over that region on Saturday.
Luckily, there have been no reports of injuries, but the storms that developed from the southern Plains to the Midwest and Great Lakes region did bring down numerous trees and power lines, and damage was reported, according to reports from NOAA’s Storm Prediction Center.
