The National Weather Service has issued fire weather warnings for portions of Oklahoma due to risk of wildfire and dust storms blowing in from Texas.
Violent tornadoes ripped through parts of the U.S., wiping out schools and toppling semitractor-trailers in several states.
A new satellite image released by the NASA Earth Observatory has captured the dramatic plumes of smoke coming from the wildfires in Oklahoma that have devastated the state since Friday. Over 130 ...
In a new report out last week based in part on pollen scores, Tulsa ranked fourth among the most allergy-affected cities ...
Dozens of fires were still burning across the state on Monday, said Keith Merckx at Oklahoma Forestry Services ... High winds ...
Ships sitting 300 miles out in the Atlantic saw Oklahoma’s dust coating their decks. Then came Black Sunday. “Dust storm. It was conditions of this sort which forced many farmers to abandon ...
A series of storms that kicked up wildfires, tornadoes and dust while barreling across eight states over the weekend have ...
In Oklahoma, almost 300 houses and structures were destroyed ... In Kansas, eight people died when high winds and a dust ...
Kansas reported eight deaths and Texas three, due to vehicle crashes caused by dust storms. Oklahoma reported four people dead from high winds or fires, and Arkansas has reported three.
and in Tylertown.Wildfires and dust storms also proved deadlyWind-driven wildfires caused extensive damage in Oklahoma and officials in both Oklahoma and Texas warned that parts of both states ...
The National Weather Service has issued fire weather warnings for portions of Oklahoma today due to a heightened risk of wildfire and dust storms blowing in from Texas. Oklahoma residents are ...