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Hurricane Erin is slowly pulling away from North Carolina. Winds are gusty and tides are elevated, but the worst of the storm ...
Erin became a Category 5 hurricane Saturday morning in the eastern tropical Atlantic Ocean but has now weakened to a Category 2.
Several homes are at risk of collapsing into the ocean as massive waves and storm surge from Hurricane Erin hammer beaches along the Atlantic coast of the United States.
Hurricane Erin has battered North Carolina’s Outer Banks with strong winds and waves that flooded part of the main highway and surged under beachfront homes.
Authorities predicted that the largest swells would whip up life-threatening rip currents from Florida to New England.
Hurricane Erin is currently tracking as a Category 2 storm, just off the East Coast. We check in on North Carolina, where beaches and roadways have flooded and evacuations have been ordered. Host ...
NCDOT warns against road travel as Hurricane Erin approaches, with potential flooding and coastal road damage expected.
Erin is also impacting Florida beaches, with large swells and elevated rip current threats continuing. The hurricane will continue to move away from the US today and slowly weaken late week. It is ...
Hurricane Erin, of Category 2 with winds of 105 mph, is nearing its closest point to the United States after spending 10 days swirling across the Atlantic. Its massive cloud system now extends a ...
As Hurricane Erin makes its way past North Carolina, Ocean City has already begun to feel the effects with large waves and dangerous surf conditions.
The NWS issued warnings for shorelines in Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Ohio, New York, North Carolina, Virginia and Maryland.