1st look into 2025 Atlantic Hurricane season
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The (Raleigh) News & Observer |
Hurricane Helene in September 2024 made landfall in Florida’s Big Bend, then tracked north-northwest and brought historic rainfall followed by catastrophic flooding and landslides to the North Caroli...
U.S. News & World Report |
Colorado State University forecasters in an early prediction said on Thursday the upcoming 2025 hurricane season would be above average with four major hurricanes out of nine hurricanes among 17 named...
Yahoo |
A powerful tornado touched down in northeastern Arkansas on Wednesday, prompting the issuance of an urgent Tornado Emergency as the supercell passed through communities such as Lake City and Blythevi...
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A new forecast from researchers at Colorado State University predicts the 2025 hurricane season will be busier than an average year.
Colorado State University, a school renowned for its hurricane research, said it expects “above-normal” tropical activity this year. The early-season prediction, released Thursday, stems from warm sea-surface temperatures, and the potential for conditions that kindle tropical activity.
The official start of hurricane season is less than 60 days away. The ‘A’-named storm will be here before you know it! (Spoiler alert: it’s Andrea.)
Hurricane season is around the corner and Thursday Colorado State University or CSU released their first forecast for the 2025 Atlantic Hurricane Season.
(Reuters) -Colorado State University forecasters said on Thursday the upcoming 2025 hurricane season across the Atlantic basin will be above average, with 17 named tropical storms, including nine hurricanes,
When a storm is particularly powerful, destructive or deadly, the name is “retired” from the rotating list, meaning it will never be used again.
A year after accurately predicting record five major hurricanes in the Atlantic, Colorado State University forecasters expect an above-average season.
After an extremely active and deadly 2024 Atlantic hurricane season, the World Meteorological Organization is retiring the names of three particularly devastating storms that broke records and made history: Beryl, Helene and Milton.