Winter Storm Chloe spread a swath of heavy snow in parts of the Great Lakes.This heavy snow swath included parts of northeast Wisconsin and Lower Michigan. Chloe also dumped light to moderate snow from Minnesota to southern New England.
Winter Storm Chloe may have lasted onlyabout 36 hours, but it spread a stripe of heavy snow in parts of the Great Lakes and laid down a blanket of snow from Minnesota to southern New England in mid-December 2017.
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Chloe deposited its heaviest snow in a swath from northeast Wisconsin into Lower Michigan.
24-hour snowfall analysis ending 7 a.m. EST, Dec. 14, 2017, illustrating the swath of snow from Winter Storm Chloe in the Great Lakes and interior Northeast.
(NOAA/NOHRSC)
Two Rivers, Wisconsin, picked up 10 inches of snow, helped by some final bands of lake-enhanced snow off Lake Michigan. 11.5 inches of snowpiled up in Sturgeon Bay, in Wisconsin's southern Door County peninsula.
Green Bay picked up 7.1 inches of snow on Dec. 13, their heaviest calendar-day snow in almost two years.
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Several locations in Lower Michigan picked up 6 to 10 inches of snow.
Detroit's Metro Airport picked up 6.3 inches of snow, timed with the afternoon commute on Dec. 13. Parts of the Detroit metro airport measured up to 9 inches of snow, including the . In the northern suburb of Utica, 9 inches of snow fell in just 9.5 hours.
Flint, Michigan, measured 7.9 inches of snow. The town of Linden, about 15 miles south-southwest of downtown Flint, picked up 10 inches, according to a local media spotter.
In northern and eastern Ohio, 3 inches of snow was the rule in Cleveland, Canton-Akron, Toledo and Mansfield. Somewhat heavier amounts were measured near Youngstown, including a 6.5 inch total in Leetonia, Ohio.
A general 1 to 4 inches of snow fell in most locations in western and central Pennsylvania, as well as southern New York stateoutside of the lake-effect snowbelts, including Pittsburgh chalking up 1.8 inches.
The towns of Karthaus (7 inches) and Slippery Rock (6 inches) came in with higher totals.
Parts of New Jersey, Long Island and southern New England picked up 1 to 2 inches of snow, including Cape May, New Jersey, West Greenwich, Rhode Island, and Scituate, Massachusetts.