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What You Need To Know About Erin And Its Threat

Erin is not only an intense hurricane, but it has also become a large storm in the Atlantic. While it won't landfall in the U.S., its large size will be a surf danger along the East Coast. Here's the latest.
What You Need To Know About Erin And Its Threatstory-preview

Erin Maps Tracker: Radar, Spaghetti Models And More

Track Hurricane Erin with our collection of maps as it passes east of the Bahamas.
Erin Maps Tracker: Radar, Spaghetti Models And Morestory-preview

Hurricane Erin To Bring Dangerous Surf To US East Coast

Major Hurricane Erin is a very large and dangerous hurricane passing just east of the Turks and Caicos and southeast Bahamas on Monday. Very large waves and life-threatening rip currents will impact the U.S. East Coast this week due to Erin’s large size and expanding wind field. The latest track from the National Hurricane Center has Erin passing between North Carolina and Bermuda by the middle of the week. The Outer Banks of North Carolina could see 20-plus-foot waves and significant coastal flooding.
Hurricane Erin To Bring Dangerous Surf To US East Coaststory-preview

Hurricane Hunters Fly Mission Through Erin’s Eye

Deep inside a hurricane, the shape of the storm’s eye can create what’s called a “stadium effect,” with towering walls of clouds that look like stadium seating. The 53rd Weather Reconnaissance Squadron captured this footage while flying through the eye of Hurricane Erin.
Hurricane Hunters Fly Mission Through Erin’s Eyestory-preview

Cone of Uncertainty: Shows Storm Path, Not Impacts

The cone of uncertainty maps are some of the most common images that we show from June to November, but do you know what the forecast means? The forecast only contains information about a storm’s future path based on historical errors, and does not tell you anything about storm surge, rainfall or winds. These impacts are often well outside the cone.
Cone of Uncertainty: Shows Storm Path, Not Impactsstory-preview