Snowstorm to Wind Down on Tuesday From New England to the Appalachians as Lake-Effect Snow Spreads Through Great Lakes | The Weather Channel
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Winter Storm

A winter storm will finish up in the East on Tuesday.

Byweather.com meteorologistsNovember 12, 2019

The Day The Temperature Rose 103 Degrees

Snow will wind down on Tuesday from northern New England to the Appalachians from a winter storm which has blanketed parts of the northern Plains, Midwest and interior Northeast the past few days.

The Weather Channel has named this Winter Storm Caleb.

Snow is ongoing Tuesday morning from northern New England into the central and southern Appalachians.

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Lake-effect snow also continues in the wake of the storm in parts of the Great Lakes region. Snowfall rates of 1 to 3 inches are likely in a lake-effect snow band pounding northwest Indiana and southwest Lower Michigan.

(MORE: Plane Slides Off Runway at O'Hare Airport)

Current Radar

Much of the accumulating snow from this storm has already fallen. But areas from northern New England into the Appalachians could see a few more inches of snow through the first half of Tuesday.

Rain may end as a brief period of snow, sleet or freezing rain along parts of the Interstate 95 corridor Tuesday, particularly from Philadelphia northward. No significant accumulations are expected.

Snow Forecast

Detroit picked up 8.5 inches of snow on Monday, making it the snowiest November day there in records dating to 1874.

Other notable snowfall totals from this storm include:

-Buffalo, New York: 10.2 inches

-Chicago: 3.4 inches at O'Hare International Airport

-Rochester, New York: 8.6 inches

In addition to the snow, freezing rain caused slick travel conditions as far south as central Texas Monday night, including around Austin.

The heaviest total from lake-effect snow is an estimated 30 inches in northwest Lower Michigan near Empire.


The Weather Company’s primary journalistic mission is to report on breaking weather news, the environment and the importance of science to our lives. This story does not necessarily represent the position of our parent company, IBM.

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