Hurricane florence spaghetti models
Hurricane florence spaghetti models
European model hurricane florence!
The latest Hurricane Florence spaghetti models map Wednesday revealed a potentially troubling story for the Southeast U.S, including Georgia, South Carolina, North Carolina and even Tennessee.
In the models, the Florence storm track now dips south and west after landfall in the Carolinas—a rare move for a hurricane approaching so far north and west in the Atlantic.
This means Florence could hover over the Southeast states, pouring dangerous rainfall, causing flash flooding and river flooding—some areas are predicted to get from 15 to 30 inches, or more.
Thus, the Federal Emergency Management Agency has issued a dire warning of "massive damage" in advance of the storm, expected to be one of the strongest to hit the region in decades.
"This will likely be the storm of a lifetime for portions of the Carolina coast," the National Weather Service in Wilmington, North Carolina, said in its forecast.
See the latest updates on Hurricane Florence, including timeline, warning