"Fully extra-tropical" Dorian is out to Sea
The U.S. National Hurricane Center declared what was Hurricane Dorian "fully extratropical" in what the center said would be its last advisory on the storm. The Bahamas death toll rose to 45 and was expected to keep climbing. Thousands remained unaccounted for.
As of 11 p.m. ET Sunday, the center said Dorian's core was "over the cold waters of the Labrador Sea" off Canada. It was about 375 miles north of Cape Race, Newfoundland, racing east-northeast at 24 mph with tropical storm-force winds of 60 mph. It was expected to keep weakening and be absorbed by a larger low pressure system Tuesday.
Dorian became a hurricane August 28, hit the Virgin Islands, brought catastrophic damage to the northern Bahamas, then briefly made landfall over North Carolina's Outer Banks as it moved up the U.S. seaboard on its way to Canada. Floodwaters have receded in the Outer Banks, revealing a muddy trail of damage