- Hurricane Dorian has been downgraded to a Category 1 storm, but it could still create "life-threatening" conditions in North Carolina, according to the National Hurricane Center.
- Projections based on NOAA data show the hurricane moving northeast, bringing the storm to parts of Virginia, Massachusetts, and Delaware.
- Dorian has devastated the Bahamas, but its path has proved difficult to predict. It has left hundreds of thousands of people without power across multiple states.
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Hurricane Dorian was still lashing the east coast of the US on Friday morning, threatening to bring storm conditions to multiple states even as it failed to make landfall and spared the US from the worst of its wrath.
As of 2 a.m. ET on Friday, Dorian was a Category 1 storm bringing hurricane conditions and "wind gusts near hurricane force" in parts of North Carolina. It was also continuing to bring tropical storm conditions to South Carolina.
A hurricane warning was also in effect in between the North Carolina/Virginia border and Delaware's Fenwick Island.
The storm was moving northeast at around 15 mph (24 kmph).
The storm has been tough to predict, and it ended up only grazing Florida and Georgia, though it has totally devastated the Bahamas.
The hurricane's remaining potential track is shown above on Google's Crisis Map, which is based on US government data.
This map shows the official National Hurricane Center's version of the cone:
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Here's why storms are getting stronger, slower, and wetter.
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