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On Thursday, Hurricane Erin was several hundred miles off the coast of North Carolina and pushing storm surge and deadly rip currents toward the shore. Two other systems may form right behind.
Hurricane Erin churned slowly toward the eastern U.S. on Tuesday, stirring up treacherous waves. Here's the latest.
Hurricane Erin tracks offshore, sparing landfall. Unlike Sandy’s 2012 surge, Erin brings high surf, rip currents, and minor flooding risks.
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.
Erin, still a large Category 2 hurricane, is expected to make a turn to the northeast and pick up speed later in the day. It should gradually weaken to a post-tropical cyclone by Aug. 23, forecasters ...
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 ...
Hurricane Erin batters North Carolina's Outer Banks, causing flooding and strong waves. Storm predicted to regain strength but not make East Coast landfall.
Tropical activity typically increases in August as sea surface temperatures warm well into the 80s. The warmest regions tend to be in the Gulf, tropical Atlantic, and near the coast of the ...
Tropical storm warnings remain in effect for the North Carolina coast. The storm will move northeast as it heads out to sea and away from land.
Hurricane Erin is moving closer to the U.S. coast at the start of the workweek. Strong wind and big waves will cause problems ...
Hurricane Erin has begun to move away from the North Carolina coast, the National Hurricane Center said in an Aug. 21 advisory.
Hurricane Erin battered North Carolina’s Outer Banks with strong winds and waves that flooded part of the main highway and ...