Tropical Storm Debby, which came ashore as a category 1 hurricane along the Florida coast early Monday, will move across the Southeast on Tuesday at roughly the speed of a human walking. That slow pace will allow it to deliver historic amounts of rainfall — most likely measured in feet instead of inches — that could lead to catastrophic flooding over the next several days.

Alex Lamers, a meteorologist with the Weather Prediction Center, said this slow pace is a hallmark of the most significant and damaging tropical cyclone rainmakers.

Debby’s meandering forecast path across the Southeast for the next several days is likely to be eerily similar to that of Hurricane Harvey, which flooded the Houston Metro area in August 2017, and Hurricane Florence, which drenched North Carolina for days in 2018. Like Debby, both storms stalled over the region and became reminders that a hurricane’s hazards can persist and intensify for days after it makes landfall.

The old cities of Savannah, Ga., and Charleston, S.C. — which have both seen their fair share of tropical storms and where flooding has become more frequent recently — will likely see the brunt of this storm. “Charleston is particularly vulnerable to flooding because it’s shaped sort of like a bowl with very poor drainage,” said Erica Grow Cei, a meteorologist with the Weather Prediction Center.