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At least 11 dead as ice storm sweeps central US

by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Dec 10, 2007
At least 11 people have been killed as an ice storm swept the United States Monday, turning roads into slippery death-traps and leaving hundreds of thousands without power, officials said.

"According to the Oklahoma Department of Emergency Management, there have been 11 confirmed fatalities in Oklahoma alone, due to weather-related traffic accidents," said Dave Nadler, a meteorologist at the regional operations center covering the southern-central states.

"We've been dealing with one to two inches (2.5-5.0 centimeters) of ice in parts of Oklahoma, and major power outages -- there are 250,000 homes without power across the state of Oklahoma, and around 150,000 people without power in southern Missouri, the hardest-hit areas so far," Nadler told AFP.

Greg Carbin, a meteorologist based in Oklahoma City, said he had been without heat or electricity for nine hours.

"It's bad. We're without power, there are many trees down. It's about as bad as I've seen it in central Oklahoma and I've lived here for almost a dozen years," Carbin told AFP.

"There is up to an inch of icy glaze in places," he said.

"Roadways exposed to the air, such as bridges and overpasses, are very bad," he added.

The wintry weather, which began its onslaught at the weekend, was expected to move north later Monday, but not before it had created more icy conditions in the central states around Oklahoma.

"The band of weather moving across Oklahoma should generate another quarter to half inch of ice before temperatures start to creep above freezing later today and tonight," Nadler said.

"Then it's all going to shift north. There is still quite a bit of ice and snow that is going to occur -- it's just shifting north," he said.

Residents of Chicago were warned by the National Weather Service to brace for icy rain, sleet and snow, which could leave a half-inch film of ice on the roads, starting Monday night.

The ice storm was expected to continue to sweep eastward and hit Washington and New York, both on the Atlantic coast, by the end of the week.

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Research Forecasts Increased Chances For Stormy Weather
West Lafayette IN (SPX) Dec 05, 2007
Researchers who study severe weather and climate change joined forces to study the effects of global warming on the number of severe storms in the future and discovered a dramatic increase in potential storm conditions for some parts of the United States. The Purdue University-led team used climate models to examine future weather conditions favorable to formation of severe thunderstorms - those that produce flooding, damaging winds, hail and sometimes spawn tornadoes.







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