Tropical Storm Humberto Becomes Hurricane
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Meteorological eyes are on a developing area of low pressure in the Caribbean Sea, watching to see how it will interact with Hurricane Humberto.
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Western North Carolina could be hit by another tropical storm. Here's what to know
Experts say Hurricane Humberto could interact with Invest 94L, potentially affecting Western NC and other regions. Here's what to know now.
Hurricane Humberto is forecast to become a major hurricane this weekend and a second system — likely to become Imelda — is a possible threat to the U.S. coast, especially the Carolinas.
A future storm named Imelda could affect the Southeast U.S. early next week, but there is plenty of uncertainty. Here are 4 concerns that our expert is watching.
Spaghetti models—computer models that illustrate potential storm paths using meteorological data—suggested Invest 94L could potentially track toward the U.S. Southeast Coast.
The tropics are heating up, with Hurricane Gabrielle and Tropical Storm Humberto both churning in the Atlantic as well as a new system that could strengthen and possibly impact the Southeast next week.
Two tropical disturbances were swirling in the Atlantic on Friday, with one being carefully watched because it could bring dangerous weather to the Southeast U.S. early next week.
At the coast, rain, wind, and storm surge could be issues. Inland for the Carolinas, we know the danger of inland flooding when a tropical system slows down. This could be one of those times where much of the Carolinas gets tropical rain for several days. Rain totals could approach or exceed 10 inches in some cases.
The former Hurricane Gabrielle was expected to bring hurricane conditions including heavy rain, a storm surge and large, destructive waves to the Azores islands starting Thursday, despite being downgraded to a post-tropical cyclone,