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With so many storms brewing in the Atlantic, it's hard to keep track. Here's the latest on Humberto, Gabrielle and 94L, which may become Imelda.
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Hurricane Imelda strengthens on track to hit Bermuda with dangerous storm surge, massive waves
Although Hurricane Imelda will not make landfall in the U.S., the effects of the storm are being felt up and down the East Coast from the Southeast through the mid-Atlantic and into the Northeast and New England.
According to the National Hurricane Center's 5 p.m. Monday advisory, Category 4 Hurricane Humberto is in the Atlantic Ocean, 295 miles southwest of Bermuda. Packing maximum sustained winds of 140 mph, the hurricane is tracking to the north-northwest at 13 mph.
Our First Alert Meteorologists say you can expect to see high rip currents, dangerous surf, and seas increasing to 6-8 feet Monday night as Hurricane Humberto and soon-to-be Hurricane Imelda churn out at sea.
Hurricane Humberto has intensified into a Category 4 storm in the Atlantic, while a separate storm system is targeting the southeastern U.S. The mayor of Charleston, S.C., has declared a state of emergency.
Hurricane Humberto and Potential Tropical Cyclone Nine are in close proximity to each other and has meteorologists and forecasters watching for the potential for a rare phenomenon called the Fujiwhara effect.
What’s left of Hurricane Gabrielle is racing toward Europe as eyes turn toward two systems much closer to North America. Tropical Storm Humberto is poised to become a strong hurricane in the southwestern Atlantic, while a nearby disturbance may pose a threat to land by early next week.