A half-mile-wide tornado touched down in Moore, Oklahoma, just south of Oklahoma City, this afternoon. A reporter from local news station KFOR supposedly called it "the biggest, most destructive tornado in the history of the world," and estimated it was two to three times the magnitude of the massive tornados that hit Oklahoma in 1999.
Updates to come.
Updates:
8:25 PM EST: The Oklahoma City medical examiner is reporting at least 37 killed, according to NBC. Glenn Lewis, mayor of Moore, Oklahoma, described his city as looking like "a debris field."
8:15 PM EST: The Red Cross has a shelter opening for those in need:
8:00 PM EST: KFOR reports that seven children have been found drowned in Plaza Towers Elementary School and as many as 30 others are elsewhere in the rubble.
7:55 PM EST: The National Weather Service has issued an early finding that today's tornado was an EF-4, the second most powerful classification on the enhanced Fujita scale. CBS News has put together a rundown of history's largest tornadoes to give some context to that rating.
7:53 PM EST: Authorities are racing to complete as much of their recovery efforts as possible before night falls, which will severely impede their abilities.
7:46 PM EST: KFOR's meteorologist estimates that today's storm was roughly three times the size of the May 3, 1999, storm that previously decimated parts of Oklahoma.
7:39 PM EST: KFOR reports that authorities are now looking for two dozen children amid the wreckage at Plaza Towers Elementary School. The mission has changed from "search and rescue" to "search and recover."
7:37 PM EST: A horrifying 28 seconds of amateur footage:
7:32 PM EST: Oklahoma Governor Mary Fallin has reportedly dispatched 80 National Guard service members to assist with rescue efforts.
7:29 PM EST: KFOR reports that "dozens" are currently seeking medical attention in area hospitals. There are still only six confirmed deaths, but that number is expected to rise.
7:27 PM EST: Image of the damage via the Oklahoma County Sheriff's Department:
7:20 PM EST: An unidentified child is lifted from the rubble at Plaza Towers:
7:13 PM EST: A heroic teacher at Plaza Towers Elementary School reportedly threw her body over several children in an effort to protect them as the storm struck a direct blow on the school.
7:12 PM EST: CNN is reporting at least six fatalities:
7:07 PM EST: More neighborhood devastation from David Massey:
7:05 PM EST: The National Weather Service has confirmed that winds in Moore this afternoon got up to 200 miles per hour, according to KFOR.
6:59 PM EST: Storm chaser footage from the ground this afternoon:
6:55 PM EST: KFOR is reporting just four fatalities right now: Three adults and an infant reporter Meg Alexander saw pulled from the rubble of a building.
6:52 PM EST: This time-lapse video of the storm's progression is terrifying:
6:50 PM EST: Local CBS affiliate KWTV reports that all the children at the second elementary school hit by today's tornado have been accounted for:
6:45 PM EST: KFOR is now reporting that the storm could have been more than two miles wide at its largest.
6:41 PM EST: Oklahoma City police tell the AP that downed power lines and open gas lines pose risks in the storm's aftermath.
6:35 PM EST: KFOR reporter Lance West got choked up while reporting in the wake of the twister, describing it as "absolute chaos" and "the most horrific I've ever seen":
6:30 PM EST: KFOR footage of Plaza Towers Elementary School, which reportedly had 75 children and faculty members in it prior to the storm, shows that the building is now decimated:
6:15 PM EST: The main entrance to the local hospital is a mess:
6:10 PM EST: CBS News now says that the tornado was a full mile-wide and that local hospitals are reporting "multiple deaths."
6:07 PM EST: KFOR's Lance West reports that the storm laid to waste at least two schools, a movie theater, and a mobile home park. One of the schools, Plaza Towers, was said to be housing 75 students in its south wing when the storm hit. Emergency teams are now digging through the debris looking for survivors.
6:03 PM EST: Resident David Massey's Vine gives just a glimpse of some of the total devastation:
[Image via KFOR]