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Video: Powerful Tornado Sweeps Across US Highway, Topples Truck

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Video: Powerful Tornado Sweeps Across US Highway, Topples Truck


Powerful tornadoes swept across the US state of Nebraska this week

Powerful tornadoes swept across the US state of Nebraska this week and damaged several homes.

Videos and pictures on social media showed immense black twisters sweeping across the sky and turning over earth, dust, and materials in their path.

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One such clip on X showed a man driving a car on the highway north of Lincoln in Nebraska.

The clip was shared with the text, “Incredible tornado intercept just now north of Lincoln Nebraska!!”

In the clip, a few vehicles can be seen stopping on the highway for the tornado to pass. Once it crosses the highway, the commuters can be seen driving further.

The video also shows that the tornado caused a trailer truck to crash in the middle of the highway.

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Men, holding the camera, can be seen immediately halting their vehicles and running to see if any harm was caused to those travelling in the trailer truck. Fortunately, the driver was not injured.

In Lincoln, a tornado also struck an industrial shed. About 70 people were inside when the roof collapsed and were evacuated, but three suffered non-life-threatening injuries, Lancaster County authorities said at a news conference.

Over 70 tornadoes were recorded across the US by the National Weather Service (NWS), most of them around Omaha, a transportation hub in Nebraska. Around 11,000 households were without power as tornadoes struck Nebraska.

Tornadoes, weather phenomena that are as impressive as they are difficult to predict, are relatively common in the US, especially in the central and southern parts of the country.





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Starting fires helped contain a Nebraska wildfire — and ignited another – Flatwater Free Press

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Starting fires helped contain a Nebraska wildfire — and ignited another – Flatwater Free Press


This story is made possible through a partnership between Flatwater Free Press and Grist, a nonprofit environmental media organization.

As the fast-moving blaze rolled toward Fire Chief Jason Schneider’s district in Cozad, he and his crew faced a literal uphill battle.

The Cottonwood Fire was tearing through the Loess Canyons, an area defined by steep slopes, narrow valleys, few roads and pockets of invasive eastern red cedar trees, which can throw embers and ash — and even explode — when they burn.

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“You think you would have it put out, and you keep on moving north, and you’d look back south and it’s just going again behind you,” Schneider said.

But the situation started to improve when they connected with a prescribed burn group. They had equipment and showed Schneider and his volunteer crew how to use fire to contain the wildfire.

“It would have burned a lot more if they hadn’t showed up and helped us get it stopped where we did,” Schneider said.