‘Erupting’ Storms Seen From Space as They Hit Four States

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Satellite imagery from the Cooperative Institute for Research in the Atmosphere (CIRA) revealed severe storms “erupting” across four states in the Central Plains on Thursday evening as the first of two storm systems rolled through the central U.S.

Meteorologists warned of the life-threatening storms set to affect millions of people in the central states earlier this week. An AccuWeather report said the systems would be “one of the most widespread severe weather events so far in 2024,” warning that the incoming storm “will unleash tornadoes, hard-hitting hail and damaging winds across a dozen states.”

The first storms arrived in the central U.S. on Thursday.

The sky turns dark and the earth turns black as a storm arrives on May 28, 2006 outside of Hemmingford, Nebraska. Multiple weather alerts were in place on Friday as satellite imagery spotted storms “erupting”…


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“High resolution imagery of severe storms erupting tonight across the Central Plains,” the CIRA posted on X (formerly Twitter).

The imagery showed the erupting storms in Wyoming, Colorado, Nebraska and Kansas. Each of the four states still had National Weather Service (NWS) alerts in place on Friday afternoon.

A winter weather advisory, winter storm warning and winter storm watch were issued for Wyoming. Colorado had all three of those advisories in place, as well as a red flag warning and a hazardous weather outlook warning of wildfire conditions.

A tornado watch, tornado warning and severe thunderstorm warning were issued for Nebraska. An NWS spokesperson told Newsweek there were active tornados on the ground in the Hastings, Nebraska, area. A flash flood warning, flood warning, wind advisory, hazardous weather outlook and fire weather watch was issued for Kansas.

“A dynamic weather system is poised to bring significant weather impacts across the Plains extending into the Mid-to-Upper Mississippi Valley regions this weekend,” the NWS warned about the system. “This system will usher in a variety of weather phenomena including thunderstorms, heavy rainfall, and even severe weather conditions.”

The NWS went on: “Thunderstorm activity is forecasted to intensify across portions of the Plains, particularly in areas extending from the Southern Plains to the Great Lakes. These storms are likely to bring heavy rainfall, increasing the risk of localized flash flooding in low-lying and urban areas.”

A second storm system is headed for the Plains and was causing high winds in Southern California on Friday afternoon, with the NWS warning of widespread power outages as the storm works its way through the state.

The AccuWeather report warned that the storm system will traverse roughly 1,000 miles on Friday, extending from southern Minnesota to central Texas. Big cities at risk for the impacts include Kansas City and Springfield, Missouri; Tulsa, Oklahoma; Topeka, Kansas; Fort Smith, Arkansas; Omaha, Nebraska; Des Moines, Iowa; and Dallas.