Gulf, National Hurricane Center and tropical wave
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A tropical disturbance moved over the Gulf of Mexico late Wednesday and it’s expected to continue westward, approaching Texas in the coming days.
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 National Hurricane Center is monitoring a tropical disturbance in the Gulf of Mexico that could produce heavy rainfall and flooding in Houston.
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.