Despite a brief cold front and chances of rain, the wildfire situation in Oklahoma remains elevated for at least another week ...
New rounds of critical fire weather are in the forecast for the central United States this week, days after devastating wildfires sparked in Oklahoma and Texas late last week and through the weekend.
Brace yourself and have a plan. Officials are bracing for more high winds and wildfires this week, and up to four more weeks, a county official says.
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Wildfires swept through several parts of Oklahoma on Friday and a near-critical fire threat is expected to continue Saturday, according to the National Weather Service. The powerful winds of up to 70 ...
The powerful low-pressure system racing across the United States reached the central plains on Friday, bringing heavy winds gusting up to 60 to 70 mph to Oklahoma, which created a critical-to-extreme ...
The National Weather Service has forecast high winds Monday and Tuesday for central and western Oklahoma following destructive wildfires the past few days. Wind gusts could reach up to 50 mph on ...
Nearly 1.5 million people across eastern New Mexico, western Texas and western Oklahoma are included in Tuesday’s extremely critical fire-risk area. Cities in the zone include Lubbock ...
Over 24 counties are included in a red flag warning for Monday and a subsequent fire weather watch for Tuesday.
The National Weather Service's Storm Prediction Center warned of "near historic" fire conditions in the Plains.
The effect on Oklahoma will be heavy winds gusting up to 60 to 70 mph, which spell a critical-to-extreme risk of rapid fire growth, the National Weather Service said. As the wind blows across the U.S.