1 Dead as serious storms threaten Texas on the eastern coast with Tornado and hail

At least one person died while the serious time broke out in a vast trait of the United States on Sunday among the warnings of harmful winds, tornadoes and they come as much as baseball.
A tree fell on a travel trailer that was camped along the Illinois river between Tahlequah and Kansas, Okla., During the heavy twenty early Sunday morning, trapping a couple inside, said the sheriff Jason Chennault of Cherokee County.
The man was declared dead on the scene and the woman suffered slight injuries, said Sheriff Chennault.
The highest risk on Sunday covered a vast area from the north -east of Texas and the northern Louisiana through Mississippi, the north -western Alabama, the Illinois, the Indiana, the Ohio and the southern Michigan, potentially hitting a population of over 40 million people.
The storm forecast center has placed these areas in an improved risk level of three out of five on the meteorological scale.
Tornado watches On Sunday afternoon he appeared through Arkansas, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Missouri and Tennessee, according to the National Weather Service.
You might expect some strong tornadoes, The National Weather Prediction Center said.
The volatile setting has been led by a cold front connected to a storm system that is moving through the large lakes and will clash with hot air rich in humidity in the South, creating the first conditions for powerful thunderstorms.
“For the hot side of that front to the south, we will have enough humidity and instability to obtain thunderstorms, and some of them could be serious,” said Marc Chenard, a Weatherologist of the Weather Prediction Center.
The risk should intensify Sunday evening.
The threat should have intensified on Sunday evening, since the storms that initially develop through Missouri and Illinois intensify while spreading in the Valleys of Arkansas, Louisiana and Texas and the lower valley of Mississippi and Tennessee.
The Storm forecast center stated that the serious potential will persist on Sunday evening, while the storms merge into larger and more intense outbreaks.
The largest threat to tornadoes is scheduled in Eastern Arkansas, in northern Mississippi, in Western Tennessee, in Western Kentucky, in the south -eastern Missouri and in the southern parts of Illinois and Indiana. Some tornadoes may be strong.
Meteorologists also warned of very large hail, up to three inch diameter, which most likely would fall through the Northeastern Texas, the north -western Louisiana, the Arkansas, the south -eastern Missouri, the southern Illinois and the Western Ohio. Even parts of western Kentucky and Tennessee can be at risk.
The threats will move to the east on Monday.
The serious weather risk will move to the east on Monday. The greatest risk will extend from Virginia to the south -ovest in Alabama, Georgia and Florida Panherle, where storms are expected to be more intense.
In the north -est, including parts of New York, the primary threat will be strong gusts of wind. Further south, the storms should be incorporated with tornado and bring very large hail.
The Storm forecast center placed southern Alabama, Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and most of Virginia under an advanced level of risk, three out of five, for bad weather on Monday and until Tuesday.
Storms are expected to continue until the night, while pushing towards the eastern coast before moving off.
However, this may not be the last round of bad weather.
“It’s an active period,” Chenard said. “Another system is likely to be following it.”
Alexandra E. Petri Contributed relationships.