Abilene TV station damaged, knocked off air by storm
Pictures posted by KTXS show damage to a section of the station's roof and walls. Another picture shows a steel tower lying on the ground.
KXAN sister station KTAB posted a gallery showing the storm's aftermath, including photos of KTXS.
The station said that none of its employees were injured during the storm.
Time codes on the social media posts suggest that the station was hit after 11 p.m. Sunday.
KTXS Meteorologist Mark Rowlett said in a social media post that the damage was caused by strong winds. The damage knocked the station off-air, he said.
KTXS is a Sinclair-owned station and ABC affiliate that covers the Abilene area. Nexstar-owned NBC-affiliate KRBC and CBS-affiliate KTAB, as well as Tegna-owned Fox-affiliated KXVA also serve the Abilene area.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBS News
2 days ago
- CBS News
How to activate location based weather alerts on CBS News app
Did you know the CBS News app can send you automatic weather alerts for your specific location? It's just one of the many ways the First Alert Weather Team is keeping you safe and ahead of the storm. Now, the next time any form of severe weather moves into your specific area, you will get an automated alert sent straight to your phone.


The Hill
3 days ago
- The Hill
How ‘corn sweat' can make a hot summer day even worse
(NEXSTAR) — Forget the dog days of summer — it's corn sweat season. Through the end of July, the National Weather Service has warned that a large stretch of the country — from Louisiana to Minnesota and eastward — is expected to experience 'dangerous, prolonged heat' coupled with humid weather. For those in the Midwest and across the Corn Belt, the high humidity can be attributed in part to the plethora of corn (and other crops) growing in the region. As Ellen Bacca, chief meteorologist at Nexstar's WOOD, explains, corn and crops 'sweat' just like humans when they become hot. Unlike humans, plants bring water from their roots and release it into the air in a process known as evapotranspiration. Have this giant, noxious weed in your yard? How to get rid of it — without burning yourself Estimates from the U.S. Geological Survey say that a single acre of corn can release 3,000 to 4,000 gallons of water vapor daily. As Nexstar's WGN previously reported, in Illinois alone, the National Weather Service said a mature corn crop is capable of producing more than 35 billion gallons of water vapor in a day. That would be enough to fill over 52,500 Olympic-size swimming pools. Iowa and other areas known for growing large expanses of corn can frequently be the most humid locations in the country. That was true Tuesday: data from the National Weather Service shows dew points in the upper 70s across Iowa, Illinois, Missouri, Kentucky, and Tennessee. Only Florida and the southern portions of the Gulf states had higher early afternoon dew points. The corn sweat effect has grown from a hyper-local event to a more expansive situation due to climate change, according to Brian James, chief meteorologist with the Nexstar Weather Center said Tuesday. 'The increased humidity caused by very large corn fields is a phenomenon that has become even more amplified due to climate change,' he explained. 'A warmer atmosphere can hold more moisture. That means as the summer heat builds and temperatures rise across the Corn Belt, the increased humidity is leading to heat index values above 110 degrees over a much larger area than what used to occur.' The latest temperature outlook from NOAA's Climate Prediction Center shows that, across the Lower 48, only California and parts of Nevada, Wisconsin, Michigan and the Northeast are likely to see below-average temperatures during the final week of July. All other parts of the country — especially areas from the southern Plains, across the Gulf Coast and into the southern Ohio Valley — have a higher chance of seeing above-normal temperatures. Any corn sweat that increases humidity will, of course, only last a few more months.


CBS News
3 days ago
- CBS News
Is corn sweat real? How crops exacerbate humidity during Illinois heat waves
Extreme heat is descending on Chicago again this week, and an agricultural phenomenon called corn sweat is making the heat wave this summer even worse. The U.S. leads the world in corn production, and Illinois grows more corn than any other state besides Iowa. At this time of year, the corn is high, lending its name to the phenomenon of corn sweat. "But really, all plants do that," said agriculture teacher Joshua Berg. "So, you know, you could just as much say 'soybean sweat.' I guess they haven't got on that marketing yet. The scientific term for the phenomenon is transpiration. Berg, who holds a master's degree in agricultural education, said transpiration is not like humans' sweat for cooling — it is a vital part of getting water to the plant. "Transpiration is a process where water is released from the plant's leaves, and that actually helps the plants move water," said Berg. CBS News Chicago Meteorologist Kylee Miller explained the effects of transpiration are showing up in this week's forecasts. "Dew points could be about 5 to 10 degrees actually higher, adding with that corn sweat, compared to what Mother Nature is giving us," Miller said. Other crops, like alfalfa and sugarcane, have higher evapotranspiration averages than corn. The evapotranspiration average for alfalfa is 6 to 8 mm/day for alfalfa and 5 to 7 mm/day for sugarcane, compared with 3.5 to 5mm/day for corn. Soybeans are in a range comparable to corn, at 4 to 6 mm/day But it is, in fact, corn's prevalence and growing season that are affecting the humidity now. "So during the growing season, one acre of corn can release 3,000 to 4,000 gallons of water a day," said Miller. "Here in Illinois, we have about 11 million acres [of corn]." Those numbers are driving up the forecasts for our summer's second heat wave this week. The effects of this corn sweat could continue into the weekend. It can result in more rainfall with higher humidity.