The National Hurricane Center was tracking four systems Saturday, two in the Atlantic Ocean and one in the Caribbean Sea.
Forecasters are monitoring a new disturbance in the Caribbean that has the potential to strengthen into a tropical storm.
The answer is found on the other side of the Atlantic, where the Sahara Desert just had weeks of unprecedented rainfall.
Hurricane forecasters continue to monitor a broad area of low pressure in the Caribbean Sea and two low-pressure systems ...
A large, slowly-spinning system across the northern Caribbean and southern Gulf of Mexico could develop into something ...
In this Aug. 14, 2024, file photo, broken electricity lines above homes damaged are seen after Tropical Storm Ernesto hit ...
There’s a new system to watch in the Caribbean, and some models suggest it could form and move north into the Gulf of Mexico ...
Hurricane models are showing increasingly high chances that a tropical cyclone could form somewhere in the western Caribbean ...
The Atlantic hurricane season continues to sputter along and is over halfway done. So far, the number of storms (seven) is slightly below average.
The tropics are again quiet, but they may not be for long. There are increasing signs that a tropical disturbance may develop ...
A large but weak storm spinning in the Caribbean has potential to develop by the weekend, according to the National Hurricane ...