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Mighty Hurricane Erin will track just east of the United States this week. Even if the center of the hurricane remains offshore, far-reaching and dangerous impacts will be felt at the Atlantic coasts.
The Northeast will get some breaks from heat and humidity over the next week to 10 days as periodic waves of air from Canada sweep in. A more prolonged cool break is likely by next weekend.
Parts of coastal Washington, Oregon and British Columbia may pick up an entire month's worth of rainfall in a matter of hours into the weekend.
Multiple rounds of severe weather have moved through the northern Plains and Upper Midwest over the past several days. Unfortunately, AccuWeather meteorologists warn that more storms are on the way.
Erin has evolved into a monstrous hurricane and is expected to take a path between the United States East Coast and Bermuda this week bringing powerful seas and dangerous surf.
The odds of a short-lived tropical depression or storm forming in the southwestern Gulf are lessening, but pockets of heavy rain could still trigger flash flooding.
Hurricane Erin will continue to strengthen as it approaches the Leeward Islands and Puerto Rico, where it will threaten with tropical downpours, pounding surf and strong winds.
The 2024 explosion hurled large rocks and debris hundreds of feet into the air, sending park visitors on a nearby boardwalk scrambling for safety. The cause has been revealed in a new report.
Erin has evolved into a monstrous hurricane and is expected to take a path between the United States East Coast and Bermuda next week bringing powerful seas and dangerous surf.
Erin has formed in the eastern Atlantic and is forecast to be the first hurricane and first major hurricane of the 2025 Atlantic season. Erin will be a long-track storm and will eye the United ...
Erin to strengthen, turn northward with dangers on US East Coast While the most likely track keeps Erin offshore from the U.S. East Coast and Bermuda, shifts in the storm’s path could bring ...
In addition to rounds of severe weather, portions of Minnesota and Wisconsin will face an increased flash flood risk through early next week.