• Na de Bovenwindse Eilanden zet Earl koers richting de Oostkust van de V.S.quote:Tropische storm bereikt orkaankracht
MIAMI - De tropische storm Earl heeft de kracht van een orkaan bereikt. Dat heeft het Amerikaanse orkaancentrum (NHC) in Miami zondag meegedeeld.
In verband met de komst van Earl is voor Sint Maarten, Sint Eustatius en Saba een orkaanwaarschuwing afgekondigd. Earl wordt binnen 48 uur op de bovenwindse Nederlandse Antillen verwacht.
Het orkaancentrum raadt mensen aan zo snel mogelijk maatregelen te nemen om hun bezittingen en zichzelf te beschermen.
Earl is nu ongeveer 365 kilometer ten oosten van de bovenwindse eilanden. Hij rukt met een snelheid van 30 kilometer per uur in westelijke richting op.
Balkenende
Demissionair premier Jan Peter Balkenende brengt de komende dagen een bezoek aan de Nederlandse Antillen en Aruba. Hij is zondag gewoon vertrokken.
Het is de bedoeling dat de premier eerst naar Sint Maarten gaat. Het is nog niet duidelijk of de orkaandreiging gevolgen voor zijn programma heeft. Volgens de woordvoerder van Balkenende wordt dat ter plaatse bekeken.
nu.nl
quote:Once Earl passes the Lesser Antilles, steering currents favor a northwesterly course towards North Carolina. History suggests that a storm in Earl's current location has a 25% chance of making landfall on the U.S. East Coast, and Earl's chances of making a U.S. landfall are probably close to that. None of the computer models show Earl hitting the U.S., though the models have brought the storm closer to the coast in their latest set of runs. It is not unusual for the models to make substantial shifts in their 5-day forecasts, and it is possible that Earl could make a direct hit on North Carolina as a major hurricane on Thursday or Friday. One should pay attention of the cone of uncertainty, and the Outer Banks of North Carolina are in the 5-day cone. NHC is giving Cape Hatteras a 6% chance of receiving hurricane force winds. The main determinant of whether Earl hits the U.S. or not is a strong trough of low pressure predicted to move off the U.S. East Coast Friday. This trough, if it develops as predicted, should be strong enough to recurve Earl out to sea late in the week, with the storm just missing landfall in the U.S., but possibly making landfall in Nova Scotia, Canada. However, five day forecasts can be off considerably on the timing and intensity of such features, and it is quite possible that the trough could be delayed or weaker than expected, resulting in Earl's landfall along the U.S. East Coast. The most likely landfall locations would be North Carolina on Thursday or Friday, or Massachusetts on Friday or Saturday. The GFS and ECMWF models predict that Earl will come close enough to North Carolina on Thursday to bring the storm's outer rain bands over the Cape Hatteras region. The other models put Earl farther offshore, but it currently appears that Earl will not pass close enough to Bermuda to bring tropical storm force winds to that island. It is possible that if 97L develops into Hurricane Fiona and moves quickly across the Atlantic, the two storms could interact and rotate counterclockwise around a common center. Predicting these sorts of interactions is difficult, and the long-term track forecast for Earl will be difficult if a storm-storm interaction with Fiona occurs.
http://www.accuweather.co(...)dangerously-clos.aspquote:Earl May Pass Dangerously Close to the U.S. East Coast
.After slamming the Leeward Islands tonight into Monday, Hurricane Earl may track dangerously close to the East Coast of the United States later this week.
The Leeward Islands will suffer a blow from Hurricane Earl's damaging winds and torrential rain tonight into Monday.
Tuesday into Wednesday, Earl is expected to be a major hurricane curving more to the northwest into the open waters of the southwestern Atlantic Ocean. The arrival of a new storm system should then turn Earl more to the northeast later in the week.
That turn should spare the United States a direct hit from Earl. However, the AccuWeather.com Hurricane Center is concerned that Earl will still pass dangerously close to the East Coast.
North Carolina's Outer Banks and Massachusetts' Cape Cod are at greatest risk for being grazed by Hurricane Earl's wind and rain late this week. The hurricane may then threaten Nova Scotia and Newfoundland next weekend.
It should be stressed that the exact track of Hurricane Earl for late this week is far from etched in stone.
Hurricane Earl could make that turn to the northeast early enough to keep its rain and wind away from the East Coast.
On the other hand, the door would open for Earl to endanger more of the coastline from the Carolinas to New England if that other storm system is slower to arrive.
What is certain is that Earl will rough up seas much more along the entire East Coast than what Hurricane Danielle is doing this weekend.
The pounding surf from Earl will likely make swimming downright dangerous from the Carolinas to the Northeast late this week. The rip current threat should also significantly increase along the rest of the Southeast coastline starting Wednesday.
Hoezo kan het een ramp worden? Komen toch wel vaker orkanen die kant op?quote:Op zondag 29 augustus 2010 21:03 schreef Frutsel het volgende:
Dit kan echt een ramp worden, ook al wordt het een hit van Cat.1...
denk dat hij echter voor die tijd nog wegdraait
(hoop ik voor ze)
een orkaan van eerste categorie die manhattan zou raken... dat kan je misschien wel vergelijken met de Katrina van vijf jaar terug...quote:Op zondag 29 augustus 2010 21:26 schreef Eyjafjallajoekull het volgende:
[..]
Hoezo kan het een ramp worden? Komen toch wel vaker orkanen die kant op?
Ziet er niet goed uit, als dit gaat gebeuren.quote:Op zondag 29 augustus 2010 21:49 schreef Frutsel het volgende:
Buigt steeds verder af richting Europa denk ik om hier voor een korte nazomertje te gaan zorgen.quote:Op zondag 29 augustus 2010 23:11 schreef aloa het volgende:
Koers is veranderd. Landfall lijkt nu te zijn voor Canada (Nova Scotia)
Het wordt nog een categorie 4.
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Denk niet dat Fiona gevaarlijk zal gaan worden zoals het er nu voorstaat. Fiona bestaat momenteel alleen maar uit een verzameling van losse onweersbuien, ik denk dat dat met de windschering van Earl te maken heeft die zuigt alle energie weg. Dat zag je ook aan Earl, die bleef de hele tijd een TS omdat ie "last" van Danielle had, nu zwakt Danielle af en hoppa, Earl wordt major hurricanequote:Op maandag 30 augustus 2010 12:34 schreef Burnie88 het volgende:
Fiona wordt echt gevaarlijk... Earl zie ik wel afbuigen en afzwakken richting het noordoosten.
quote:Puerto Rico -- Hurricane Earl lashed northern Leeward Islands with heavy rain and strong winds Monday after strengthening into a Category 2 storm. Hotels were shut tightly overnight as tourists sought shelter inside their rooms.
The U.S. National Hurricane Center in Miami said Earl could become a major hurricane Monday night or early Tuesday.
"It is possible that Earl could become a Category 4 hurricane as we get into the middle to late portions of the week," hurricane center specialist Michael Brennan said.
Hurricane warnings were in effect for Antigua, Barbuda, Montserrat, St. Kitts, Nevis, Anguilla, St. Martin, St. Barthelemy, St. Maarten, Saba, St. Eustatius, the British Virgin Islands and the U.S. Virgin Islands.
Steady bands of rain began falling late Sunday on islands including Antigua, where the Grand Pineapple Beach Resort on the north side battened down early as a precaution.
Pacman!quote:Op maandag 30 augustus 2010 22:19 schreef meteo-online het volgende:
Hier nog even een loop van Earl:
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quote:EARL's path shifts further west, problems for Carolina's
Things are starting to look a little more ominous for portions of the U.S. East Coast as powerful hurricane Earl churns in the southwest Atlantic. The NHC reports that top winds remain at 135 mph- a category four hurricane. The discussion from Dr. Pasch, the forecaster tonight, was excellent. He outlines the fact that Earl could be in almost ideal conditions for future strengthening but has backed off, just a little, of the previous forecast of 150 mph. None the less, Earl is expected to be a very intense hurricane as it approaches North Carolina these next few days.
High surf will begin impacting portions of the Southeast over the next couple of days as large swells from Earl radiate out from its strong core. Then, it all comes down to how far west Earl gets before it turns north and then east of north. The NHC track has shifted west ever so slightly once again- enough so that there is cause for concern that hurricane conditions could impact the NC Oter Banks. Any further shift west before Earl fades back to the east would mean a direct hit over Cape Hatteras or even points west. People in eastern North Carolina should begin thinking about their hurricane plans- how to get boats moored, etc. That time might be coming.
After a really close call or possible landfall in NC, the next problem is New England. Right now, the core of Earl is forecast to remain off the Massachusetts coast, but again, the critical aspect of the track has to do with when Earl turns east of its north progress. The later this happens, the more people will be affected- possibly by a rather strong hurricane. People with interests from the Carolinas to Nova Scotia need to be watching the progress of Earl very closely from here on out
Met welke kracht?quote:Op dinsdag 31 augustus 2010 09:04 schreef Frutsel het volgende:
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Ze hebben de koers toch naar het westen verzet. Nu lijkt hij dus echt de oostkust van de VS te gaan raken![]()
Categorie 3quote:
Van de ene kant gun ik het ze niet, maar van de andere kant zou het toch een bak zijn als half manhanttan onder water komt te staan. Ze zijn er zo vaak voor gewaarschuwd maar nee dat kan ons toch niet overkomen. En dat dan 5 jaar na kathrina waarbij men in de jaar daarvoor ook al genoeg twijfels had geuit over de stormveiligheid van het achterland daar.quote:Op dinsdag 31 augustus 2010 09:12 schreef Frutsel het volgende:
[..]
Categorie 3
(zie de OP van dit topic )
Zeker als het pad vanavond opnieuw naar het westen wordt bijgesteld wordt het een linke soep daar.
Denk dat dinsdag de meeste ellende alweer weg is... maar ja... hoe de stad erbij ligt, that's the questionquote:Op woensdag 1 september 2010 07:47 schreef Fargo het volgende:
Hebben de kenners hier enig zicht op de laatste ontwikkelingen? Dinsdag vlieg ik naar NY, moeten wij ons 'zorgen' maken?
quote:Earl comes on the heels of Hurricane Danielle, blamed for rough surf and riptides in New York and New Jersey last weekend.
The Big Apple could be in for more bad weather with Earl expected to churn off its shore at the weekend, but the NHC declined to speculate how close it will come.
Barry Baxter, a hurricane centre meteorologist, said: "We just don't know.
"It's too early at this point. We're just telling everybody to keep their eyes on the track and just keep checking back."
quote:'Orkaan Earl niet naar Amerikaanse kust'
MIAMI/RALEIGH - De angst voor een landing van de orkaan Earl op de Amerikaanse zuidoostkust is woensdag afgenomen. De gewijzigde weersomstandigheden sturen het oog van de orkaan volgens waarnemers boven zee langs de kust naar het noordoosten, weg van de kust van met name de staat North Carolina.
Toch kan de Amerikaanse oostkust wel te maken krijgen met de gevolgen van Earl, zoals buitengewoon hoge golven. Daarom heeft North Carolina de noodtoestand uitgeroepen.
Alle bewoners en bezoekers van het eiland Hatteras aan de oostkust worden geëvacueerd. Ook op het zuidelijker gelegen eiland Ocracoke is de evacuatie begonnen.
Earl heeft woensdag aan kracht gewonnen. Met windsnelheden van 215 kilometer per uur valt de orkaan nu in klasse 4. Dit is het een-na-hoogste niveau van de Saffir-Simpsonschaal, die de kracht van orkanen weergeeft.
Earl trok eerder onder meer langs Sint Maarten, Saba en Sint Eustatius, maar richtte daar weinig schade aan dankzij de noordelijke koers.
quote:Can NYC handle a hurricane?
The National Hurricane Center warns that Hurricane Earl may swing by dangerously close to the U.S. East Coast before curving back out to sea. While the odds are it won't strike New York City directly, such an event is not unprecedented, and the city has plans in place to evacuate — and to hunker down — if need be.
Problem is, there would be precious little time to prepare. And while the forecast suggests it is very unlikely Hurricane Earl will strike Manhattan with more than a glancing blow, a direct hit by a hurricane is ultimately inevitable, scientists say.
Because hurricanes move more quickly and become very difficult to predict once they head north of the Carolinas, experts say there might be just hours to issue evacuation warnings before a storm hits.
Compounding this, the Big Apple has one of highest population densities in the nation – more than 8 million people live in New York City. Based on studies by the Army Corps of Engineers, officials have determined that vulnerable, low-lying areas in and around New York City and metropolitan New Jersey would need to start heading out sooner than what is typically ordered in Florida and other hurricane-prone states.
Frankly put: There would not be enough time to get everyone out. Disaster plans for New York City focus therefore on getting people out of low-lying areas that might be inundated by storm surges, and having others stay put or move to safe locations within the city.
History as a lesson
Since records have been kept in the 1700s, dozens of hurricanes have affected the greater New York City area. A handful were major events. Scientists have geologic evidence that other major hurricanes have hit the region in prehistory.
One event, in 1821, offers a telling lesson. On Sept. 3 that year, a major hurricane slammed without warning into Manhattan. "Everything was flooded south of Canal Street," according to historical accounts. The East River and the Hudson River converged over lower Manhattan, but that part of the island had not yet been built up. The storm hit at low tide. Had the tide been high, the flooding would have been far worse, researchers say.
Late in the summer of 1938 (dit is de FORGOTTEN STORM OF 1938) , a storm that started off the coast of Africa arrived unexpectedly along the coast of New Jersey, where 140 mph (225 kph) winds tore up boardwalks. The storm raced north at more than 50 mph (80 kph) and uprooted trees and destroyed houses on Long Island. Since no warnings were issued, people fled only when they saw the storm approaching, and by the time the storm tore through much of the northeast, an estimated 682 to 800 people were killed, according to "Sudden Sea: The Great Hurricane of 1938" (Back Bay, 2004).
More recently, Hurricane Carol made landfall as a Category 3 storm on Long Island and Connecticut in 1954. In 1960, Hurricane Donna created an 11-foot (3.4 meters) storm surge in New York Harbor, causing extensive pier damage, according to the New York City Office of Emergency Management. Hurricane Gloria in 1985 would have been "catastrophic" if it had hit at high tide and been just slightly closer to the city. There have been several other near-misses in the past six decades.
Scientists note that since so few hurricanes actually strike the New York area, it's hard to say when it will happen again. But history suggests it is only a matter of time before a major hurricane makes a direct hit on Manhattan.
What would happen
The Army Corps has thoroughly mapped what areas could flood. New York Harbor would act like a funnel for an incoming storm surge, and water would have nowhere to go and could be pushed up as high as a 3-story building.
"A major hurricane could push more than 30 feet of storm surge into some parts of New York City," according to the Office of Emergency Management.
The region's major airports are among the locations that could find themselves submerged by the sea. Nursing homes on Coney Island — challenging facilities to evacuate — are at great risk.
New York City has plans in place that, if necessary, would call for evacuations by zones, at the direction of the mayor. [Residents can find their zone here.] The plan focuses on early use of mass transit and discourages evacuation by car. Complicating evacuations is this simple fact: High winds and flooding can precede a major hurricane by hours, bringing a halt to evacuation efforts well before the center of a storm arrives.
Could get worse
Today, with climate change and rising seas levels, the effects of a hurricane could be even worse for New York City, and could become increasingly devastating as time goes on.
A 2001 study conducted by Columbia University scientists looked at several impacts of climate change on the New York metropolitan area. The researchers projected a rise in sea level of 11.8 to 37.5 inches (29.9 to 95.2 centimeters) in New York City and 9.5 to 42.5 inches (24.1 to 107.9 cm) in the metropolitan area by the 2080s.
"With sea level at these higher levels, flooding by major storms would inundate many low-lying neighborhoods and shut down the entire metropolitan transportation system with much greater frequency," said Vivien Gornitz, one of the Columbia University scientists working with the New York City Department of Environmental Protection to better understand what hurricanes would do to the city.
While a hurricane would undoubtedly spell disaster for the city, Manhattan is currently better prepared to face a heavy storm than it has been in previous years, according to Nicholas Coch, a Coastal and Estuarine Geology professor at the City University of New York and an expert on natural disaster preparedness.
"City officials definitely have an improved perception of how to handle a hurricane, especially regarding evacuation plans," Coch told Life's Little Mysteries.
If a hurricane were to hit Manhattan, the island would not necessarily have to be evacuated, said Coch, who reasons that moving people from the lowest areas to higher ground would suffice in keeping them safe – although this should ideally be done the day before the anticipated storm.
In fact, if Earl does come New York's way, it is most likely that beach communities in Suffolk, Long Island, would be hit the hardest, Coch said. Both Suffolk and Nassau county officials say that preparations have been made in case Earl strikes, with updated evacuation plans, potential shelter sites and a new, high-speed notification 'Code RED' system that alerts residents of impending weather emergencies by phone, e-mail and/or text messages.
quote:CNN BreakingNews
Tropical storm warning issued for coast of Long Island in N.Y. ahead of Hurricane Earl
Hurricane Earl strengthens, winds now 145 mph, cat 4; Hurricane watches now posted for parts of Mass. and Long Island. Pressure now 928 mb.
Evacuation orders underway for some parts - more follows
Uhuhquote:Op donderdag 2 september 2010 11:05 schreef kwiwi het volgende:
Hmm hoor net dat delen van NC al geëvacueerd worden. M'n vader woont daar en we gaan er over een paar dagen naartoe, dus hoop dat Earl zich een beetje inhoudt. En dat de boot die in VA aan de kust ligt heel blijft..
Wordt weer veel het nieuws volgen de komende dagen dus..
Voor de duitssprekendenquote:Katastrophen Alarm USA
"Millionen-angst"
"Monster Earl"
"16meter höhe wellen"
"320km/h böen
quote:Officials consider more evacuations
Ocracoke, N.C. — As Hurricane Earl continued to churn toward the Eastern Seaboard, Dare County officials and town leaders planned to meet Thursday morning to determine if mandatory evacuations should be issued for areas north of the Oregon Inlet, including Kill Devils Hills.
On Wednesday, Dare and Hyde counties ordered evacuations of Hatteras and Ocracoke Islands on the Outer Banks.
Carteret County emergency management officials also announced a mandatory evacuation for visitors and residents of the Bogue Banks area from Atlantic Beach to Emerald Isle, effective Thursday morning.
As of 5 a.m., Earl was a Category 4 storm with maximum sustained winds of 145 mph. It was located about 410 miles south of Cape Hatteras and was moving north-northwest at 18 mph.
Gov. Bev Perdue declared a state of emergency on Wednesday and warned people along the coast not to let down their guard, despite projections that the Category 4 storm will not make landfall there.
“There is still concern that this track, the core of the storm, could shift a little farther to the west and have a very significant impact on the immediate coastline Our present track keeps it off shore, but you never know,” National Hurricane Center spokesman Dennis Feltgen said.
Earl’s first encounter with the U.S. mainland should come around midnight Thursday, as the storm is forecast to just off Cape Hatteras, bringing wind gusts of up to 100 mph and several feet of storm surge both from the Atlantic and the sounds to the west of the islands.
Early Thursday though, the Outer Banks had only light winds and high clouds as the eye of Earl was hundreds of miles south of Cape Hatteras. Those conditions were expected to deteriorate throughout the day, said National Hurricane Center forecaster Todd Kimberline.
Despite it’s strength, the National Hurricane Center says it's expected to fluctuate to a Category 3 storm still before it passes Cape Hatteras with winds around 115 mph.
A hurricane warning was in effect for all of the Outer Banks and Core Banks and extends from from the Bogue Inlet, north of Camp Lejeune, to the Virginia border.
Hundreds leave ahead of Earl
Emergency officials said they expect Earl to bring heavy rain, wind gusts up to hurricane strength and a 3- to -4-food storm surge that will likely create flooding on local roads, including the narrow N.C. 12, making travel unsafe.
Sgt. Jeff Gordon, a spokesman for the State Highway Patrol, urged people to leave storm-threatened areas well before Earl hits.
"Some of the problems that we experience sometimes is when everybody tries to (leave) at one time," Gordon said. "This has been a highly reported storm. I hope that the public heeds the warnings and always takes precautionary measures as far as moving inland."
The State Emergency Operations Center urged those leaving the coast to register with the American Red Cross "Safe and Well" program which helps keep families and friends informed about one another during emergencies.
Earl's impact father south is still expected to be felt in the form of dangerous rip currents and beach erosion.
Red flags were flying high at Wrightsville Beach as a warning.
quote:Earl keeps creeping more to the West?
SouthCoast and Cape Cod have been placed under a hurricane warning as Earl, now approaching the North Carolina coast, has turned but not quite as quickly or as sharply as forecasters had hoped.
A hurricane warning means means that hurricane conditions — with winds greater than 74 mph — are expected within 36 hours.
“It looks like it's encroaching a little closer to our region,” said Kim Buttrick, meteorologist at the National Weather Service office in Taunton. “It's started to creep a little more to the west, but we still show the projected track to be southeast of Nantucket.”
Earl is currently a Category 4 hurricane with sustained winds of 145 mph. Gradual weakening is expected in the next several days and it is expected to be a Category 2 storm with sustained winds of about 100 mph when it passes closest to the Cape.
In its 11 a.m. advisory, the National Hurricane Center in Miami said Earl was 300 miles south of the North Carolina coast and 765 miles south southwest of Nantucket. It was expected to turn before striking Cape Hatteras, North Carolina.
“A turn toward the north-northeast with an increase in forward speed is expected on Friday,” the advisory said. “On the forecast track, the center of Earl will pass near the North Carolina Outer Banks tonight and approach southeastern New England Friday night.
Warnings and watches had been issued for the entire coast from North Carolina to the Massachusetts-New Hampshire border.
Earl was expected to veer as it approached Cape Hatteras, steered away by an advancing cold front, forecasters said.
“The issue is the timing,” said Bill Read, director of the National Hurricane Center in Miami. If the cold front stalls, Earl could make landfall in North Carolina, which Read called “the worst-case scenario.”
And, if that happens, all bets are off for SouthCoast. “That would create too many uncertainties when you come up to New England.”
Even if the storm stays offshore, it could have a serious impact on SouthCoast.
First of all, extremely high surf and strong rip currents are anticipated. Beyond that, “as the storm moves north, even as large as it is, it's likely to gain in area,” Read said. “There's a large swath of tropical storm force winds that would cover the eastern third of Massachusetts.”
The good news is that most projections show Earl tracking east of here, meaning the area would be hit by the weaker, left quadrant of the storm.
“With most storms moving rapidly to the north, the left (or west) side of it produces less wind, and you're not going to have as much of a surge threat,” Read said.
quote:Earl set to bash Nantucket and CapeCod
Large and dangerous Hurricane Earl will bash Nantucket and Cape Cod with 100-mph winds Friday night, while strong winds, flooding and damage can be felt as far west as Boston.
Earl will make its closest brush to the U.S. coastline Friday night by passing within 30 miles of Nantucket. That will put the destructive, expanding eye wall and hurricane-force winds easily over the island, as well as Cape Cod, Martha's Vineyard, much of southeastern Massachusetts and the eastern part of Rhode Island.
People in these areas will be in harm's way and run the risk of being casualties, while property may be damaged or lost.
These areas can expect storm surge and coastal flooding, beach erosion and over-wash on low-lying roads.
As the storm unravels and moves northeastward, it will produce an expanding shield of rain and gusty winds.
Downed trees and power outages are expected as far west and north as Boston, Providence, R.I., Portsmouth, N.H., and Portland, Maine, as well as eastern Long Island and Down East Maine. These areas can expect at least tropical storm wind conditions.
Rainfall of 2 to 4 inches is forecast over the eastern third of New England, which is enough to cause at least minor problems from flooding in poor drainage and urban areas.
While Earl will be weakening over the colder waters northeast of North Carolina, it will remain a dangerous storm moving northeastward through New England and Atlantic Canada.
Earl may not be the last hurricane to threaten the East Coast of the U.S. Many other systems are already waiting on deck in the tropical Atlantic Ocean or are cruising westward in the birthing areas of the northwestern Indian Ocean and Africa.
quote:Weakened Earl slams US Eastcoast
Hurricane Earl was today battering the American east coast as thousands of families fled inland for shelter.
Despite being downgraded to a category two, winds had still reached 105mph as the storm hit the dangerously exposed Outer Banks area of North Carolina.
New York is bracing itself for impact tomorrow as the hurricane tears north along the eastern seaboard.
The impact of the Category 2 storm appeared to be less than originally expected as Earl churned north parallel to the U.S. Atlantic coast hours after it was downgraded from a Category 4 hurricane.
Gusts dropped from 140mph early Thursday to around 105mph later that day, but forecasters warned Earl remained powerful enough to cause serious damage.
Local emergency officials said no casualties or major structural damage had been reported so far. At least one coastal road was cut by waves washing over it.
Certainly conditions are not as severe as they could have been,' said Sandy Sanderson, the director of emergency services in Dare County.
At 2am local time, Earl was packing top sustained winds of 105mph and its centre was passing east of the Outer Banks islands that jut into the Atlantic, the U.S. National Hurricane Center said.
A further weakening was forecast during the next 24 to 36 hours but Earl is expected to remain fierce as it turns toward the north-east.
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