Nine tornadoes are now confirmed across seven states from the severe weather outbreak that struck the central and eastern United States over the weekend, with Nebraska and Texas identified as newly affected states in updated Storm Prediction Center reports as damage surveys continue.
The count — one more than the eight confirmed twisters reported Sunday — extends the outbreak’s reach into the Southern Plains and the central High Plains. A tornado was confirmed approximately 10 miles west-northwest of Lipscomb in the Texas Panhandle, and a separate twister touched down 6 miles south of Lyman in western Nebraska. Those additions bring the complete list of affected states to Arkansas, Missouri, North Dakota, Nebraska, Pennsylvania, Texas, and Wyoming.
The Storm Prediction Center’s 48-hour storm report record for this system now includes 65 large hail reports alongside 206 damaging wind reports. The hail total is more than double the figure reported Sunday, reflecting the standard lag as trained spotters and National Weather Service survey teams file verified accounts in the hours and days after a storm event. The 206 wind damage reports spread across the seven-state corridor reinforce that tornadoes represented only a portion of the system’s overall severe weather footprint.
Nine active National Weather Service alerts remained posted Monday across the affected region. Alert zones stretched from northeastern Wyoming and western Nebraska through north-central Texas, and from the Missouri Ozarks east into southwestern Pennsylvania — a sign that residual threats had not fully cleared.
The Storm Prediction Center provided five confirmed tornado locations from the outbreak: 1 mile east of Centerville, Pennsylvania; 2 miles east of Nail, Arkansas; 6 miles south of Lyman, Nebraska; 8 miles north-northeast of Hillsdale, Wyoming; and 10 miles west-northwest of Lipscomb, Texas. Survey work to document the remaining four tornado tracks is ongoing.
Residents near the Texas Panhandle tornado track can monitor Amarillo weather for updated local conditions as assessment teams work the Lipscomb area. Those in southwestern Pennsylvania near Centerville should track any continuing instability through Pittsburgh weather.
Based on current Storm Prediction Center data, no additional large-scale tornado outbreak is in the near-term forecast. Active National Weather Service alerts across seven states, however, indicate that the severe weather threat from this system had not fully dissipated as of Monday morning.