United States: The storm system that caused at least four people to die and multiple tornadoes was moving to central-southern Appalachian, Mid-Atlantic, southeast Sunday.
More about the news
At least several dozen tornadoes made contact with the earth in Alabama, Louisiana, Mississippi, North Carolina, Georgia, Arkansas, and Texas during the course of the weekend as motoring continued to go all during the preeminent vital weekend.
Tate Reeves, the Governor of Mississippi, said that there was one death in Adams County due to the storm and one fatality in Lowndes County from the storm, though several people were injured as professionals assessed the damage around the state as reported by axios.com.

In another storm-related accident, a man was killed when his vehicle struck a tree on a road in Iredell County, North Carolina; the Brazoria County Sheriff’s Office identified on Facebook a person killed and four others injured in the Liverpool area south of Houston, Texas where a suspected tornado struck Saturday.
What more are the officials stating?
The Montgomery Office Of Homeland Security and Emergency Management in Houston released on its Facebook that an EF-3 tornado struck, damaging more than 300 homes and leaving eight to 10 people with minor injuries.
The Storm Prediction Center had put out a very high “moderate risk” or level four out of five on the threat scale,” for part of Mississippi and Louisiana besides a “Particularly Dangerous Situation” tornado watch covering southeastern Arkansas, central and southwestern Louisiana, southwestern Mississippi and southeastern Texas on Saturday.

Experts in different research revealed that climate change enhances the intensity and frequency of precipitation intensities, axios.com reported.
Looking solely at climate change, it has been suggested that changes in the circumstances under which thunderstorms occur and develop may be responsible for larger epidemics, albeit less numerous, through increased instability in the atmosphere by reduced, inter alia, the wind shear.