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Much of northern Mississippi remained on tornado watch Monday afternoon after a twister made its way through Tupelo, according to a National Weather Service report. Major damage has been reported, although the number of casualties is still unknown.
Parts of Alabama, Arkansas, and western Georgia were also placed under tornado watch until Monday night as the storm system slowly traveled north from Mississippi to the mid-Atlantic states.



Meteorologists reported seeing a “debris ball” signature on their Doppler radar, a clear warning that a potentially dangerous tornado was incoming. Television news anchors and weathermen at WTA-TV in Tupelo, in trying to relay the warning to the public, were forced to evacuate the studio for their own safety.
Tupelo, with some 140,000 residents, experienced heavy winds and downed power lines after at least 16 people died in Arkansas and other states due to additional storms that ravaged the central and southern US. At least 14 people died in Little Rock, Arkansas after a massive tornado created 80 miles of destruction through the suburbs around the state capital.
“Just looking at the damage, this may be one of the strongest that we’re seen,” Arkansas Governor Mike Beebe told Fox News Monday. “And preliminarily – we haven’t done any records checking – but it looks like this is the largest loss of life that we’ve seen in one tornado since I’ve been governor.”
Just as Tupelo residents were assessing the damage from the storm that swept through their town, a second tornado appeared 100 miles to the south in Winston County.



The National Weather Service warned that the Little Rock tragedy would not be the last before the end of storm season. Governors in multiple states declared states of emergency, with meteorologists advising that the potential of sudden tornado formation will be present into the beginning of the week.
“This is a multi-day event and today is the second day of significant tornado risk and unfortunately, probably not the last,” Bill Bunting, operations chief at the NWS’ Severe Storm Predictions Center in Norman, Oklahoma, told Reuters Monday.
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