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Get the Bloomington, MN local weather forecast by the hour and the next 10 days. ... 12 mi Visibility ... The Weather Channel 20 hours ago On Today's Date: 'Knickerbocker Storm' Is Still A ...
Snow is expected to come to Bloomington, and stick around this afternoon, as temperatures drop into the 20s throughout the evening. Alexander McGinnis, a meteorologist at the National Weather ...
Almost four feet of snow fell in some parts of the Northeast by Sunday and temperatures are expected to be 10 to 15 degrees below normal over parts of the Upper Midwest and the eastern third of ...
Snowfall totals for the Halloween Blizzard Over the next two days the snow continued to fall, leading to additional snowfall of one to two feet (30 cm to 60 cm). 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.
Snowfall totals ranged from 6 inches (15 cm) to over 1 foot (0.30 m) across the region. Drifts of up to 4 feet (1.2 m) were reported in central Indiana. [26] The heavy snow, ice storms and low temperatures of January the 26th led to Interstate 90 being closed from Chamberlain, South Dakota, to the Minnesota border. [27]
In the 1950s, the Hyland Hills Ski Area was known as Mt. Normandale, with an annual attendance of around 48,000 skiers. After a snow drought of 6 years, the number of skiers dropped significantly. This caused Normandale to purchase a snowmaker and a sitzlift in an attempt to bring more skiers into the area.
The following is a list of Minnesota weather records observed at various stations across the state during the Over 160 years. Minnesota is a state in the Upper Midwestern region of the United States. Due to its location in the northern plains of the United States its climate is one of extremes.
The average annual snowfall in the Twin Cities is 45.3 inches (115.1 cm), with an average of 100 days per year with at least 1 inch (2.5 cm) of snow cover. The most snow the Twin Cities has officially seen during one winter was in 1983–1984 with 98.6 inches (250 cm), and the least was in 1930–1931 with 14.2 inches (36.1 cm). [8]