National Hurricane Center watching disturbance in Atlantic
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A disturbance hurricane forecasters were tracking Saturday in the Gulf of Mexico could bring heavy rains to the region next week, according to the National Hurricane Center.
Other than that tropical disturbance we've been tracking this week, there's really nothing else happening across the Gulf, the Caribbean Sea or the Atlantic Ocean, at least not yet. We're still in a time of the hurricane season where it's not at all unusual to have little to no activity,
The area of low pressure in the Gulf has been struggling this afternoon and remains disorganized. The National Hurricane Center still maintains a 40% chance of development over the next two days. If it becomes named,
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The Beaumont Enterprise on MSNMeteorologists track Gulf disturbance for potential tropical storm formationMeteorologists are keeping an eye on the Gulf as a disturbance moves westward across the Florida Panhandle between Tallahassee and Panama City on Wednesday, July 16. The disturbance, designated as AL93,
COLUMBIA, S.C. — Meteorologists track each stage of a hurricane's lifecycle as it develops over the ocean. It's a process that starts with just a cluster of thunderstorms over warm water and can turn into a massive, swirling storm system.
Invest 93L was still over land early Wednesday, but it's expected to bring the risk of heavy rainfall and flooding to Houston in the coming days.