Tornadoes touch down in U.S. Midwest, no
initial damage reported
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[June 23, 2016]
By P.J. Huffstutter
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Tornadoes and severe
thunderstorms tore across northern Illinois on Thursday as part of a
weather system forecast to threaten a swath from the Mississippi River
to Ohio.
Authorities have received five reports of tornadoes in the area
west of Chicago, though it was unknown if the reported twisters were
individual or the same storm, a National Weather Service spokesman
said.
Heavy rains and winds approaching 60 mph (96 kph) accompanied the
storm front as it swept into Chicago, he said.
Authorities had no initial reports of damage from the tornadoes,
which were sighted in an area of farmland and small towns.
"So far we've been pretty lucky. Most of the damage has been cause
by flooding right now," said Lee County, Illinois, Sheriff John
Simonton.
There also were three brief touchdowns of tornadoes in western
Illinois, said Tim Gross, a meteorologist for the weather service in
Davenport, Iowa.
Much of the region was under flash flood, thunderstorm and tornado
warnings.
The tornadoes came after thunderstorms moved over parts of South
Dakota, Missouri, Iowa and Illinois, bringing bursts of heavy
rainfall totaling more than 2 inches (5 cm) per hour.
Early on Wednesday, windy conditions were seen in parts of southern
Iowa and Northern Missouri, meteorologists said. Winds gusted up to
66 mph (106 kph) around Muscatine, Iowa.
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The storm system could bring heavy rain across parts of Illinois,
northern Indiana and northern Ohio overnight and into early
Thursday, forecasters said.
There was the possibility of the system becoming a derecho event, or
a long-lasting thunderstorm that moves very quickly and contains
fierce, straight-line winds. Such winds can be stronger than a weak
tornado, and reach up to 100 mph (160 kph).
Such winds could harm crops, but farms were generally expected to
benefit from rains.
Rain in the Ohio Valley will provide much-needed relief from
short-term dryness for corn and soybeans planted this spring,
according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
(Additional reporting by Justin Madden and Tom Polansek in Chicago;
Editing by G Crosse and Michael Perry)
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