- 911 calls from Texas floods reveal chaotic and desperate pleas for rescues
- Carolina Beach is warning of potential King Tide flooding
- NCDEQ launches Hurricane Helene recovery grants program
- Why no hurricanes made landfall in the US in 2025
- Florence to begin interviewing police chief finalists in January
Learn the difference between hurricanes, cyclones and typhoons
If you’ve ever wondered what separates hurricanes, cyclones and typhoons from one another, the only difference is that they happen in different geographical locations.
“We call a tropical system a hurricane in the Atlantic and northeast Pacific. In the northern Indian ocean, they’re called cyclones. And people living along the northwest Pacific call these storms typhoons,” according to AccuWeather.
Aside from where these storms take place, they all are the same weather phenomenon. The only time when a hurricane would become a typhoon is if the storm crossed the International Date Line at 180 degrees west longitude. This happened recently in 2014, when Hurricane Genevieve crossed this line and became Typhoon Genevieve.