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The National Hurricane Center (NHC) is monitoring two tropical systems in the Atlantic while Hurricane Erin tracks away from the U.S. East Coast but continues to produce dangerous surf and rip ...
On Thursday, Hurricane Erin was several hundred miles off the coast of North Carolina and pushing storm surge and deadly rip ...
The monster storm slowly began to move away from the East Coast on Thursday. Forecasters say it could intensify again to be a major hurricane.
Hurricane Erin is still churning north and on track to pass by the Jersey Shore and Delaware beaches hundreds of miles off ...
Hurricane Erin began strengthening again Wednesday as it crept closer to the mid-Atlantic coast, its outer bands brushing North Carolina’s Outer Banks as beaches closed across much of the U.S. East ...
Although Hurricane Erin is not expected to make landfall, the effects of the tropical storm are causing flooding on the east coast of the US.
Erin’s path keeps the main core away from land however, the outer bands impacted parts of the Mid-Atlantic Coast Wednesday into early Thursday. The storm pulls away from the US, stays off the East ...
As Hurricane Erin moves east of the U.S., bringing impacts along the Atlantic coast, the National Hurricane Center continues to watch two areas in the tropics for possible development.
A powerful and sprawling Hurricane Erin continued lashing hundreds of miles of coastline along the Eastern Seaboard with its outer bands Thursday morning, proving a storm of such size doesn't need to ...
A watch means the ingredients are there for severe weather. A warning means it is happening. But there are differences based on weather type.
As of the 5 a.m. advisory, Hurricane Erin has max sustained winds at 105 mph, is located 205 miles east-southeast of Cape Hatteras, North Carolina.
The International Space Station captured the unusually large storm as it swirled near the East Coast of the United States.