Hurricane Erin, North Carolina and Outer Banks
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Hurricane Erin slams East Coast
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Hurricane Erin has begun to move away from the North Carolina coast, the National Hurricane Center said in an Aug. 21 advisory.
The footage of Erin was captured by the Sen SpaceTV-1 camera system mounted on the International Space Station in low Earth orbit. The space streaming company Sen says its SpaceTV-1 mission launched to the ISS in 2024, and its public livestream began in December that year.
The storm could bring "life-threatening surf and rip currents" and potential flooding, officials say, as the category two hurricane churns north just off shore.
On Thursday, Hurricane Erin was several hundred miles off the coast of North Carolina and pushing storm surge and deadly rip currents toward the shore. Two other systems may form right behind.
The International Space Station captured the unusually large storm as it swirled near the East Coast of the United States.
"Heavy rainfall is possible on the Outer Banks of North Carolina, with potential for a maximum of 4 inches," NHC said Tuesday.
Hurricane Erin's push up alongside the east coast is bringing rough seas and high winds to Cape Cod and the Islands, disrupting ferry travel in the waning weeks of summer.
Natural disasters have long posed singular risks for people in the United States without permanent legal status.