Gulf, National Hurricane Center and tropical wave
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Gulf, Texas and Tropical cyclone
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The system likely won't develop into a tropical depression or storm, and it will likely cool us off after a sweltering few days. Here's more.
Recent hurricane seasons have been defined by storms supercharging over the Gulf of Mexico’s warmer-than-normal waters as they barrel toward Florida’s west coast. Experts are hopeful that trend could wane this summer,
The 2025 Atlantic hurricane season continues to show signs of activity, and there’s a growing chance we’ll soon be tracking our next named storm. So far this season, three named storms have already formed.
A low pressure system off the southeast coast of the U.S. is expected to move through the Gulf of Mexico toward Louisiana in the next day or two, but has a low chance of developing into the next named tropical storm.
Hurricane Fiona is the strongest hurricane of the Atlantic season, and now forecast models show a developing storm could become a monstrous threat to the US Gulf Coast by next week.
The Gulf Coast storms made up one-third of the 18 named storms seen in the Atlantic season last year, 11 of which became hurricanes. Five of those were major hurricanes.
A brewing low-pressure system near Florida’s coast could drench Jacksonville with heavy rain and storms, raising the risk of flash flooding.