Yahoo
Advertisement
Advertisement
USA TODAY

Tropical storm tracker: Cyclone in Atlantic could hit Carolinas Monday

James Powel, USA TODAY
Updated
1 min read
The National Hurricane Center Saturday is tracking Tropical Storm Gordon and a disturbance off the southeast U.S., which may bring heavy rain and flash flooding to the Carolinas and Mid-Atlantic early next week.

The National Hurricane Center is tracking two separate disturbances in the Atlantic Ocean to start the week.

A potential tropical cyclone off the coast of the Carolinas served as the most immediate threat to U.S. residents, with the storm about 125 miles east, southeast of Charleston, South Carolina as of Sunday evening.

The disturbance was expected to creep northeast toward the coast at about 7 mph through the day Monday.Maximum sustained winds were about 45 mph on Sunday evening, with some strengthening expected before landfall.

Advertisement
Advertisement

The storm is expected to bring heavy winds, storm surge and up to 8 inches of rain to the Carolinas along with the threat of tornadoes Monday.

Tropical Depression Gordon

Tropical Depression Gordon is further out in the Atlantic, about 1,100 miles east of the northern Leeward islands.

The storm is moving to the west at about 8 mph and is expected to take a "west to west-southwest" motion over the next few days, according to the National Hurricane Center.

The storm is "forecast to slow down considerably through the middle of the week," the Sunday evening update said.

Francine slams into Louisiana: See photos and videos of impact and damage

Atlantic storm tracker

Tropical Storm Gordon spaghetti models

This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Tracking tropical cyclone off Carolinas, depression in Atlantic

Advertisement
Mobilize your Website
View Site in Mobile | Classic
Share by: