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Date Location Earliest recorded snow [1] Trace: August 31, 1949: Duluth: Earliest measurable snow: 0.3 inch (1 cm) September 14, 1964: International Falls: Latest recorded snow: 1.5 inches (4 cm) June 4, 1935: Mizpah: Most snow, 24 hours: 36 inches (91 cm) January 7, 1994: Lake County: Most snow, one storm: 47 inches (119 cm) January 6–8 ...
By the time the snowfall ended on November 4, the storm had dropped 36.9 in (93.7 cm) on Duluth, the largest single snow storm total in Minnesota history at that time. The Twin Cities received 28.8 in (72.1 cm), setting a single-storm record for the metropolitan area.
And on Nov. 3, a few more tenths of an inch, bringing a whopping 28.4 inches of snow, the biggest single storm still on record. But there was an even bigger event roughly a decade prior.
In Minnesota, 27 in (69 cm) [9] of snow fell at Collegeville, and the Twin Cities recorded 16 in (41 cm). [10] Record low pressures were recorded in La Crosse, Wisconsin, and Duluth, Minnesota. [3] Transportation and communications were crippled, which made finding the dead and injured more difficult.
Wondering how much snow has fallen near you? USA TODAY's detailed map lets you explore snowfall accumulation over the past 24, 48, and 72 hours. You can also check seasonal totals starting from ...
Only 19 inches of snow had fallen in Duluth, Minnesota, on Lake Superior, from October through February, according to the National Weather Service; it averaged about 68 inches of snowfall every ...
In Omaha, Nebraska a foot (31 cm) of snow fell, Sioux Falls saw 7 inches (18 cm), Duluth, Minnesota saw 8 inches (20 cm), and International Falls, Minnesota saw 24 inches (61 cm). Record low pressures were recorded in communities in Nebraska, Minnesota, Illinois, and Wisconsin , with a low of 28.55 inHg (967 mb) in Duluth, Minnesota.
The fresh powder sent the seasonal snowfall to a staggering 137.1 inches (11.4 feet), a And even with one month of astronomical spring in the books, snow is still piling up.