CBS/AP/ April 16, 2011, 7:36 AM

Tornadoes' death toll rises to 17 in 4 states

Updated 7:45 p.m. ET

The death toll from a vicious storm system that swept through eight states - the deadliest storm of the season so far - has risen to 17. Forecasters are warning tornadoes are possible across eastern South Carolina and North Carolina.

The National Weather Service says severe storms should enter western North Carolina Saturday and move across both states.

Officials in South Carolina say a tornado has caused a church to collapse and six people were inside. There is no immediate word on injuries.

Melinda Wadford with the St. Stephen Fire Department auxiliary said Saturday the storm caused damage in several different parts of Berkeley County near the coast. Firefighters are out checking on residents.

The tornado in South Carolina is part of a storm system that already pummeled the South and Midwest, killing 17 people. Widespread damage has also been reported in North Carolina.

Seven deaths were reported in Alabama, including a man killed when the storm tossed a mobile home nearly a quarter of a mile across a state highway.

One death was reported in Greene County, Miss., according to a spokesman for the state's Emergency Management Agency.

Nine fatalities were reported earlier in Arkansas and Oklahoma.

In Alabama, Autauga County Chief Deputy Sheriff Joe Sedinger said three adult family members were killed around 11 p.m. Friday when a tornado ripped through homes in the Boone's Chapel community 24 miles north of the state capital of Montgomery.

"The tornado hit and jumped and hit and jumped again," Sedinger said. "It would do some damage and then move on."

Don Faulkner, meteorologist with the National Weather Service in Mobile, said heavy damage was also being reported in rural Washington County. He estimated around 40 percent of the houses in the area are mobile homes.

Some 30 tornadoes were spotted in eight states.

On average, April sees 163 tornadoes. But this April is only half over, and we've already had nearly 160 tornadoes and an unusually high death toll, reports CBS News correspondent Don Teague.

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Reed Timmer, one of the Discovery Channel's "Storm Chasers," followed the storm system from Oklahoma into Clinton, Miss. He called this severe weather outbreak "one of the largest I've ever chased in my entire career as a storm chaser."

"The number of storms was substantial," he said on "The Early Show on Saturday Morning." "I think we were chasing at least six or eight different tornadic supercells, and the environment was so perfect over such a large area, the conditions were setting the stage for historic outbreak."

The cause of the tornadoes: Cold, dry air pushing east from the Midwest, colliding with warm, moist air from the Gulf of Mexico.

As the thunderstorms and tornadoes pass, residents are coming out to survey the damages and pray for miracles. One Oklahoma family's prayers were answered: They found their pet dog, named Miracle, alive - buried under a pile of debris.

The danger isn't over. The storm threat and the tornado threat continues today, as that storm system continues moving slowly east.

The system damaged or destroying dozens of homes, businesses and churches in Mississippi as it swept eastward. Crews worked to clear roads, find shelter for displaced families and restore power to thousands.

In Marengo County in west-central Alabama, four separate tornadoes hit over the span of about five to six hours, emergency management director Kevin McKinney said.

"They weren't simultaneous, they were back-to-back," he said.

The mobile home that had been tossed was a pile of rubble, along with another 30 homes or businesses that were destroyed, McKinney said. Four people had minor injuries.

Alabama Gov. Robert Bentley declared a state of emergency for the entire state, and the first race of a busy weekend at the Talladega Superspeedway was postponed until Saturday morning.

The storms began late Thursday in Oklahoma, where at least five tornadoes touched down and two people were killed. The system then pushed into Arkansas, killing seven more. Dozens of others were hurt.

By midday Friday, the storms had marched into Tennessee, Louisiana and later into Georgia. At least three twisters touched down in Mississippi, where a state of emergency was declared in 14 counties, causing widespread damage but only one serious injury.

The hardest hit was Clinton, a city of about 26,000 people just west of Jackson, the state capital. At least seven people were taken by ambulance to hospitals with injuries.

Debra Zepponi, 50, looked at her roof damage and was thankful for what she didn't lose. Her Yorkshire-Maltese mix dog Bailey was not hurt, and her mother's favorite magnolia tree in the yard was the only one left standing.

"I'm glad it didn't get her tree," said Zepponi, whose mother died a few years ago.

In western Alabama, there was massive destruction in the small town of Geiger. An elderly woman was pinned down by her ceiling that had collapsed, but she was rescued without getting hurt, said Margaret A. Bishop-Gulley, Sumter County's emergency management director.

Officials were even having difficulty setting up shelters there. A school didn't have any power and the alternate site, a community center, had just one generator that could only light up half of the building.

"It's just been one catastrophe after another," she said.

Arkansas Gov. Mike Beebe said he had never seen the state suffer so many deaths from straight-line winds -- sudden, violent downbursts that struck with hurricane force in the middle of the night. Typically, tornadoes and floods cause most of Arkansas storm-related fatalities.

"Just trees blowing on people's residences -- I don't recall anything even approaching this," Beebe said.

Unlike tornadoes, which develop from columns of rotating air, straight-line winds erupt from a thunderstorm in unpredictable downdrafts, then spread across the landscape in all directions.

Teams from the National Weather Service worked Friday to learn more about what caused the damage.

Forecasters warned of approaching danger as much as three days earlier, but the winds up to 80 mph and repeated lightning strikes cut a path of destruction across a region so accustomed to violent weather that many people ignored the risk -- or slept through it.

At Crystal Springs, lightning split a tree that fell into a home, killing an 18-month-old girl and her father as they slept. In Little Rock, winds knocked a tree into a home, killing a woman and her 8-year-old son in his bed.

In the Arkansas town of Bald Knob, a 6-year-old boy died when the top of a tree more than 6 feet in diameter crashed through his home while he was sleeping.

The worst damage in Oklahoma was in the small town of Tushka, where residents wondered what would become of their community after a twister damaged or destroyed nearly every home along the two main streets. The only school -- a collection of buildings housing grades K-12 -- was all but gone.

"It's hard to deal with because we're a small community with limited resources. It's hard to do the cleanup," Mayor Brickie Griffin said.

Two people were killed and at least 25 hurt as the tornado plowed through the town of 350 before dawn. At least a dozen homes and businesses were destroyed.

Stacy George, who lives across the street from the school, slowly recovered items from the rubble of her home, which had shattered windows and a collapsed roof. A pickup truck had been blown into the side of the house. But George's husband and 20-month-old son survived.

"We're basically starting over," she said, laying out clothes, cowboy boots, a penny jar, a lamp and a chair in her driveway.

"We're trying to salvage what we can," she said. "It's devastating. It's just horrible. Thank God we have so much help."

Oklahoma Gov. Mary Fallin declared a state of emergency for 26 counties affected by the storm.

Back in Tuscaloosa, Ala., an apparent tornado damaged a motel and struck an oil change business, blowing the plastic out of large signs. Roads were crisscrossed with power poles and trees.

"It was a dark funnel coming down," said Sam Packwood, who works at Bama Mini Storage in Tuscaloosa. "The sirens went off and all; it was pretty exciting for 20 or 30 minutes. I hope nobody got hurt."

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
7 Comments Add a Comment
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m0u5y says:
I'll put it this way -- unless we stop destroying this planet, we better be lucky enough to find a second Earth out there because otherwise Humanity will just die off. But I guess that's just Natural.
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difiyah says:
Oh, please give me a break with the climate change crap! I'm 55 and have seen outbreaks like this before, several in the 1970s and 80s, complete with destruction and mayhem, just like the present day. The 90s were actually relatively calm in comparison to those 2 decades, at least in this area. Then there were my dad's tales of the 1940s outbreaks, he lived through quite a few.
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curse914 replies:
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Look at this top to bottom (quick scan). See a trend?

http://www.k5kj.net/news_archives.htm#1953

There is other data out there for you to study. BTW: anecdotal evidence is not evidence at all, difiyah.
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samXXkiley says:
coucou,
je suis d?sol?e, mes condol?ances aux familles des victimes,
qu'ils reposent en paix,
? cause du changement climatique, les saisons ne sont plus ce qu'elles ?taient, la plan?te agonise
il faut rester vigilant,
.............
I'm sorry, my condolences to the families of victims,
they rest in peace
because of climate change, the seasons are not what they were, the planet is dying
it must remain vigilant,

"au revoir"
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msimamaji says:
I am not surprised. Extreme weather patterns is the by-product of global climate change. The more greenhouse gases we pump into the atmosphere, the more fires,hurricanes, and tornadoes we are going to witness.
While the GOP insists that global climate change is a Muslim,socialist liberal myth, insurance companies are not fools. I am sure that actuaries are working overtime to recalcuate insurance rates for many of those homes and businesses affect by severe weather.

If we continue to pump greenhouse gases into the atmosphere, this is just a preview of what's to come. The writing's on the Wall.
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Lifeson2112 replies:
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Listen up sheep. These kinds of storms have been happening since time began. There is no increase due to your global warming myth. I've lived in the plains and south my whole life and the storms are just as big and bad as they've always been and not anymore frequent. You armchair climatologists net to get an education and stop listening to the global warming extremists.
m0u5y replies:
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I guess then we're a planet full of sheep considering the majority of all humanity understands that human kind can not only damage this planet and the natural cycles, but we have done so many times. We have caused the extinction of species, we have made a hole in the ozone (which was fixed with prompt change by banning CFCs), we destroy entire eco-systems with pollution and we all know that the balance of nature is extremely fragile. It doesn't take much change to cause a huge effect on the planet -- if we wanted, we could completely obliterate this planet. Of course, Nature always has a way to survive, and long after humanity has died off, new organisms may have a chance to develop and prosper. We have defied Nature in many ways -- medicine, surgery, prosperity, moving rivers to suit our purposes, destroying entire forests and habitats to build houses and the like... it would be complete arrogance to think that we have no effect on weather, currents, icebergs, etc... Humanity is such an odd and mysterious organism, but just because we have developed high intellect and the ability to create and reason, it doesn't mean we should use it just to make our lives easier and ignore any consequence. But the nay-sayers would never give up their modern commodities just so future generations can prosper. It matters not to the middle-aged conservative if humanity is destroyed by greed since they won't experience the bulk of it. And I guess many of us would probably not give up what we really have to give up in order to at least curtail the effect we're having on the planet. We're no different than a fungus -- as long as the fungus isn't too prolific, it can feed off of the host organism without hurting it, but as soon as it grows too big because of optimum conditions, it destroys the tree and then dies off unless it finds another organism. I doubt we'll find another Earth anytime soon.