As Florida recovers from the tangled seaweed blob plaguing its coasts, nature may have something else in store for the state: dust from the Sahara.
Saharan dust is moving across the Atlantic Ocean and could reach South Florida, resulting in hotter days and less rain, meteorologists said.
As of Saturday afternoon, the dust was near the Bahamas, about 300 miles east of Florida.
The Weather Service does not track the dust’s speed as it travels, she said.
The dust could arrive in South Florida by this week, said Ping Zhu, an earth and environment professor at Florida International University.
Persons:
Keily Delerme, Ping Zhu
Organizations:
National Weather Service, The Weather Service, Florida International University
Locations:
Florida, South Florida, Bahamas, Puerto Rico, Tampa