CDT Thursday in portions of Ballard, Carlisle, Graves and Hickman counties. Overnight rain that rolled through Western Kentucky led to a flash flood emergency early Wednesday in parts of the region, forcing people from their homes.Īccording to the National Weather Service in Paducah, a flash flood warning remains in effect until 2 p.m. Flash flood emergency in western Kentucky Both northbound and southbound lanes were reopened as of 3:08 p.m. Major north-south highway I-95 had been shut down for a couple of hours Wednesday due to trees on the roadway, local officials said. Several homes were also reported damaged. The tornado damaged a building that houses pharmaceutical company Pfizer, a major employer in the area, reported. City crews are responding to power outages and downed trees.” Rocky Mount city officials wrote on Facebook that “a reported tornado moved through the northern part of the city a short time ago. The twister was reported on the ground in Nash County near Rocky Mount, North Carolina, which is about 44 miles northeast of Raleigh, just after 12:30 p.m. The tornado was rated an EF-2, with winds estimated at 135 mph, the weather service in Raleigh, North Carolina, reported. A tornado touched down in eastern North Carolina on Wednesday afternoon, injuring at least two people, damaging homes and businesses, and shutting down I-95, authorities said. In the East, where the heat isn't as extreme as it is in the South or West, severe weather was the story Wednesday. − Skye Seipp, Austin American-Statesman Tornado causes injuries, damage in North Carolina Purdum said inmates described prisons during the summer as a "living hell." Carlee Purdum, a Texas A&M University research assistant professor, says the number reported is “wildly underestimated” because determining whether heat was the cause of death is difficult. Amanda Hernandez, Texas Department of Criminal Justice communications director, said preliminary findings show the deaths are "not heat related." Last month, nine people died of heart failure or unknown conditions, which advocates blame on the excessive heat in the prisons. Prison advocates, ministers, politicians and grieving parents are lobbying the Texas governor, lieutenant governor and Senate to put air conditioning in prisons as triple-digit temperatures transform them into a "living hell." More than two-thirds of Texas' 100 prisons do not have air conditioning in their living quarters, advocates say. Still, "there aren’t any unprecedentedly extreme heat events on Earth that haven’t been exacerbated by climate change,” Swain said.Īmerica's red-hot summer: How people are coping with heat waves across the country Texas heat brings call for air conditioning in prisons This does not appear to be a sudden, sustained acceleration of the long-term trends climate scientists have been observing for decades, he said. Still, he doesn't believe Earth has reached some sort of climate tipping point. The extreme temperatures being recorded this summer are the result of the combination of natural variations within the climate system and human-caused climate change, with a hefty serving of El Niño thrown in.ĭaniel Swain, a climate scientist a the University of California, Los Angeles, said the world is starting to see the long-term, human-caused warming. Summers are always hot: Here's how we know climate change is making summer 2023 hotter Climate change, El Niño conspire to bring the heat “It doesn’t cool down here at all and surface temps can get so ridiculously high," Murphy said. At Valleywise Health Medical Center in some extreme cases, some patients were being cooled off in ice-packed body bags, Communications Director Michael Murphy told CNN. The dangerously hot temperatures are also taxing hospitals. AccuWeather has 110-plus degree highs forecast daily through at least the middle to latter part of next week. "This record is forecast to be obliterated," AccuWeather meteorologist Renee Duff said of the Phoenix streak. And Phoenix can expect little relief: The weather service warned that the "extremely dangerous and long-duration heat wave" will continue over the Southwest well into next week. through this weekend, forecasters warned. Oppressive temperatures will continue to spread across the south-central and southeast U.S. The city also set its all-time mark for hottest night on record early Wednesday with an overnight low of 97 degrees, the National Weather Service in Phoenix reported. PHOENIX − The city smashed its record for most consecutive days at 110 degrees or higher as a historic temperature inferno tightened its grip across much of the nation's southern tier Wednesday.
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