A drone video shows homes along North Carolina's Outer Banks collapsing into the Atlantic Ocean after massive waves kicked up by hurricanes Humberto and Imelda pounded the coast.
Hurricane Imelda is churning up dangerous surf, rip currents, coastal flooding and beach erosion along the United States’ East Coast as it races toward Bermuda Wednesday. Bermuda is under a ...
Hurricane Imelda on Wednesday took aim at Bermuda having intensified into a Category 2 storm, according to the National Hurricane Center, while Florida’s coastal conditions remained ...
Update: By 11 a.m. Wednesday, Oct. 1, Humberto had weakened and was no longer a hurricane. Humberto and Imelda are moving northeast, away from North Carolina, but their swells are still causing ...
Hurricane Imelda is barreling toward Bermuda as forecasters warn it would swipe past the tiny British territory as a Category 2 storm.
Cape Hatteras National Seashore as a high tide pounded the beach and washed over dunes in Buxton, the park service said. The large waves and high seas from hurricanes Imelda and Humberto are forecast ...
Five homes on North Carolina’s Outer Banks collapsed amid warnings of dangerous surf as a pair of hurricanes passed far off the U.S. East Coast, officials said Tuesday, and authorities in Bermuda said ...
Two people have died and at least five homes have collapsed as a result of the twin storms that are turning in the Atlantic Ocean fewer than 500 miles apart.
Five houses collapsed on the Outer Banks as Hurricane Humberto and Hurricane Imelda brought strong surf to the southeast coast.
"The combined impact of the two storms, Humberto and Imelda, may cause isolated flash flooding, coastal flooding, ocean overwash, wind gusts, and dangerous currents throughout much of this week," NC ...
Portions of coastal North Carolina, including the Outer Banks, have already been seeing the effects of the storms. Here’s what to know.