At least 34 people have died in the US, including 12 in Missouri alone, after deadly tornadoes ripped through several southeastern states, destroying cars and flattening homes.
In Kansas, at least eight people died after more than 55 vehicles were involved in an accident due to a dust storm, A2 CNN reports.
More than 250,000 households were without power in seven states, including Michigan, Missouri and Illinois, overnight into Sunday, according to the PowerOutage tracker.
Severe weather is expected for the region, with tornado warnings issued across eastern Louisiana, western Georgia, central Tennessee and the western Florida Panhandle.
Flood warnings have also been issued for central Mississippi, eastern Louisiana and western Tennessee; as well as parts of Alabama and Arkansas, as severe weather continues to stalk the Southeast, writes A2 CNN.
The National Weather Service (NWS) said the flooding could be deadly. Multiple tornado warnings were also issued across Alabama on Saturday evening.
The NWS warned of "multiple intense to violent long-lasting tornadoes" in those areas, describing the situation as "particularly dangerous."
The weather agency said: "If you live in these areas, go to the strongest structure you have access to and stay put until the storms pass." (A2 Televizion)