Hurricane Erin unleashes powerful waves and rip currents
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Hurricane Erin floods New York and New Jersey
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Hurricane Erin is bringing 100 mph winds and dangerous rip currents to coastal towns, prompting beach closures and tropical storm warnings from North Carolina to Virginia.
It's only the fifth named storm so far of the Atlantic hurricane season, still going down in the books as the first major hurricane of the year. In a series of videos captured by GOES-19, you can see the progression of the storm and see just how far Erin's outer bands extend.
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FOX 13 Tampa Bay on MSNHurricane Erin brings high surf, flooding along Atlantic coast, NHC monitoring 3 tropical waves
As Hurricane Erin moves east of the U.S., bringing impacts along the Atlantic coast, the National Hurricane Center continues to watch three areas in the tropics for possible development.
Hurricane Erin continues to move away from the U.S. East Coast, however swimming in the ocean will remain dangerous for a few more days.
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Where is Hurricane Erin supposed to hit? Track the storm's path, see spaghetti forecast models
There's a one in five chance of a tropical storm reaching Tennessee in 2025, Colorado State University research shows. Here's the latest on Hurricane Erin and it's projected path.
The Gulf Coast of the United States is increasingly vulnerable to hurricanes, a scientist has warned in a new study, 20 years after Katrina devastated New Orleans and hundreds of miles of coastline.
First Alert Meteorologist Trevor Gibbs is tracking the tropics.
The International Space Station captured the unusually large storm as it swirled near the East Coast of the United States.
Hurricane Erin is now a Category 2 storm. The storm will start to make its way up the U.S. east coast on Tuesday.