![]() The storm eventually made a third landfall in Louisiana before completely fizzling out. Ivan made landfall in Alabama before curving across the Southeast United States and returning to the Atlantic to only head south toward Florida and eventually west into the Gulf of Mexico for a second time. The only difference was Ivan turned into the Gulf of Mexico instead of heading straight into the Caribbean. That storm began well south of where most tropical systems formed, passing near South America before making a hard turn to the north. Hurricane Ivan in 2004 has already shown a similar path to that of Matthew. It wouldn't be the first time something like this has happened, either. This possibility is still nearly a week out and highly speculative, but some forecast models are beginning to show this while others simply show Matthew making a loop before heading farther into the Atlantic. This means instead of heading up the East Coast, Matthew could turn around and head back toward Florida, possibly even making a second landfall! Initially, every forecast model was expecting Matthew to ride up the East Coast and eventually go out to the Atlantic, but now the two tropical systems could interact with one another in something called the Fujiwhara Effect. In the past day, Tropical Storm Nicole quietly formed in the Atlantic to the northeast of Matthew, and this new storm could alter Matthew's course for the worse. Once the hurricane makes it past Florida is when it gets interesting. RELATED: Track every hurricane and tropical storm with RadarCastĬurrent forecast tracks for Hurricane Matthew show the possibility for a brief Florida landfall within the next two days. RELATED: Storm Shield provides life-saving weather alerts Hurricane watches and warnings stretch up and down Florida's Atlantic Coast. Hurricane Matthew is tearing through the Bahamas today as Florida and the rest of the Southeast United States prepare for the worst.
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