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Here's a quick, easy-to-read look on the latest about Hurricane Erin, including what Florida residents should know.
Hurricane Erin threatened the East Coast with dangerous rip currents as the large storm was expected to grow while moving on ...
Notice the historical line that the storm has made a significant turn from heading west to almost directly north ...
The storm is now a Category 2 and has prompted mandatory evacuations in some parts of North Carolina's Outer Banks.
Forecasters say the monster storm will turn away from the eastern U.S. and won’t make landfall. But they predict it will ...
By Tuesday, Erin had lost some strength from previous days and dropped to a Category 2 hurricane with maximum sustained winds ...
Hurricane Erin’s wind field is expected to continue to grow as it scrapes along the Eastern seaboard, delivering rough surf and deadly riptides from Palm Beach County all up way up to the Northeast.
Erin’s surf and storm surge could cause erosion along sections of the Florida and East Coast and shapes up as potentially worse for North Carolina’s barrier islands, which are under mandatory ...
Hurricane Erin is churning in the Atlantic on Tuesday and it is forecast to “substantially grow in size” while moving closer ...
Hurricane Erin is expected to bring large waves, rough surf and life-threatening rip currents from Florida to Canada ...
The National Hurricane Center in Miami said Hurricane Erin was moving north more or less parallel to the East Coast and was ...
Evacuation orders were issued in North Carolina Tuesday as Hurricane Erin continued to swirl upward across the Atlantic Ocean ...