Hurricane Erin begins moving away from North Carolina
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Erin, Category 2 hurricane
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Hurricane Erin was unleashing powerful waves and rip currents along the East Coast, threatening beachfront homes and flooding roads as authorities urged people to stay out of the water. The National Hurricane Center has warned that roads in the low-lying ...
Hurricane Erin is expected to churn up the waters off New Hampshire as it continues to move northeast this week. The storm is still expected to stay well offshore, but it will likely bring rougher surf and dangerous rip currents to New Hampshire through the end of the week.
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.
The International Space Station captured the unusually large storm as it swirled near the East Coast of the United States.
Life-threatening rip currents and other dangers brought to the US east coast by nearby Hurricane Erin will last for at least a couple more days, officials say, as the the storm heads north. The storm has already soaked parts of the Atlantic coastline ...
Hurricane Erin is still churning north and on track to pass by the Jersey Shore and Delaware beaches hundreds of miles off the coast. While the heart of the storm will likely stay well offshore (fortunately),