Here’s the latest on tornado alerts and what they mean.
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What’s the difference
- Tornado watch: Conditions are favorable for tornadoes to develop. Stay alert, review safety plans, and monitor updates. Widespread area, possible hours ahead of storms.[2][3]
- Tornado warning: A tornado has been detected or is imminent in the area. Take immediate action to seek shelter and protect life. Smaller area, typically minutes to act.[3][2]
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Why this matters now
- Warnings are more urgent than watches and require you to move to a safe place right away if you’re in the path.[2]
- Watches give you time to prepare: locate your safe shelter, gather essential items, and ensure others are aware.[1][2]
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How to stay safe
- Know your local shelter options: interior room on the lowest floor, away from windows, under sturdy furniture if possible.[1]
- Listen for official alerts via the National Weather Service, your local meteorological service, or trusted weather apps.[9]
- If you’re outdoors, seek sturdy shelter immediately; if driving, try to park safely and protect yourself, leaving the vehicle only if you can reach substantial shelter quickly.[9]
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Quick takeaway
- Watch means “tornado possible; stay alert.” Warning means “tornado imminent or occurring; take shelter now.”[2]
Illustration
- Example scenario: A county is under a tornado watch in the afternoon; by evening a warning is issued for a smaller area within that county; residents switch from prep to immediate shelter. This progression reflects the standard alert hierarchy used by authorities.[2]
If you’d like, I can pull the most recent NWS alerts for your exact location and summarize any active watches/warnings right now. I’m able to tailor the guidance to Marseille if you’re asking about travel or international alerts, but tornado alerts are primarily a U.S.-centric system, so I can also explain how other regions issue severe weather warnings.[9]
Sources
When "minutes matter" in severe weather, faster forecasting technology is crucial for saving lives, says one NOAA meteorologist. A wave of storms is hitting the South with most of northeastern Texas and parts of Louisiana under tornado watches. Texas also faces potential hail, flash floods and wind gusts up to 70 miles per hour. CBS News national reporter Kati Weis reports.
www.cbsnews.comtornadoes
www.weather.govA powerful storm system affected the eastern United States on Monday, March 16, bringing the threat of tornadoes to communities that are still healing from past disasters and forcing residents to differentiate between urgent weather alerts....
www.geo.tvUnderstand Tornado Alerts
www.weather.govIn a tornado warning? Use our tornado tracker map to see if a tornado might be headed your way.
www.tornadohq.comtornado watch Latest Breaking News, Pictures, Videos, and Special Reports from The Economic Times. tornado watch Blogs, Comments and Archive News on Economictimes.com
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