North Texas, flood warning
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An onlooker captured the moment a haboob, or a large of wall of dust, painted a brown streak across a gloomy skyline in Pecos, Texas on June 10.
Sunday night’s thunderstorms knocked out power to tens of thousands of people across North Texas, brought winds over 50 miles per hour and dropped 1-3 inches of rain. The storms, while strong, were not quite as intense as some forecasts originally suggested.
About 30 high schoolers and athletes, powered by breakfast tacos, came together to help clean up the community.
3don MSN
The storms have moved to the southeast, and North Texas is looking at a quieter day ahead. Morning temperatures near 70 will warm into the mid-to-upper 80s Monday afternoon as skies begin to break up. Another disturbance could bring showers and a few storms to the southwest early Tuesday morning.
Severe storms left thousands of people in North Texas without power on Sunday night as a week of dangerous downpours begins.
A cold front is likely to remain stalled over Central Texas to start the workweek, bringing a chance of thunderstorms that could be severe Monday night into Tuesday, according to the National Weather Service in Dallas/Fort Worth. Impact areas are likely to be between the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex and Austin.
More than 40 million Americans are in the threat zone through Saturday night, stretching from Texas to the Carolinas.
A severe storm with damaging winds, hail, and tornado risk is expected in North Texas Sunday night from 9 p.m. to 1 a.m.
FOX Weather Exclusive Storm Tracker Brandon Copic was tracking storms in northwestern Texas on Thursday when he encountered this monster "dust buster" blasting through a field in Morton.