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News / Winter Weather

Winter storm packing hefty snowfall amounts sweeps across Midwest

By Alex Sosnowski, AccuWeather senior meteorologist

Published Feb 25, 2020 5:10 PM EDT

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Winter weather advisories remained in effect Wednesday morning from St. Louis, to Detroit and Toledo, Ohio, as two storms were in the process of merging and delivering one of the biggest snowfalls of the season to the region.

The dynamic storm has shifted its track farther to the southeast, causing the area's heaviest snow to pivot. Detroit is among the areas in the new bull's-eye.

Back on Nov. 11 and 12, a storm brought 9.2 inches of snow to Detroit Metro Airport. The storm system through Wednesday might not quite add up to that amount, but snowfall totals of 3-6 inches are anticipated.

Snow amounts neared 2 inches at the Chicago's O'Hare and Midway airports Wednesday morning, and flights out of Chicago experienced minor delays. The winter storm watch for the city was lifted as a result of the storm's shifting path, and lakeshore flood warnings were posted instead for the Windy City.

Late Wednesday morning, the two-pronged storm was still taking shape as it marched eastward.

"Two storms will join forces to form one large storm in such a way that the corridor where moderate to heavy snow can fall has shifted south of Chicago but may be centered on Detroit; Champaign, Illinois; Fort Wayne, Indiana; and close to Toledo, Ohio," AccuWeather Senior Meteorologist Dan Pydynowski said.

"An AccuWeather Local StormMax™ of 24 inches is forecast, but that is likely across the southern parts of Quebec," Pydynowski added.

In the Midwest, the top amount, not including lake-effect snow that follows, is likely to be in the neighborhood of 8 inches. Much less snow will accumulate on the roads as opposed to grassy areas and on parked vehicles. However, enough snow will fall, especially where the intensity of the snow is heavy during the day and where snow falls steadily during the late afternoon, nighttime and early morning hours, for roads to be slippery.

Snow spreading across the Midwest on Feb. 26, 2020. (AccuWeather)

Some areas in the path of the storm's heaviest snow are running behind the seasonal average. Sixty to 70% of the average snowfall this winter has been measured in Champaign, Illinois; Fort Wayne, Indiana; and Toledo, Ohio, prior to this storm. Detroit has been close to average thus far, but this storm should put the city ahead of the average mark of 32 inches as of Feb. 25.

Travel will become slippery as the snow falls along the Interstate 70, 80 and 90 corridors in the Midwest. On Wednesday morning, police in Missouri posted video on Twitter showing slippery conditions on roadways and reported that officers had responded to "several slide-offs and crashes.

Current traffic conditions on NB US 63 at Ashland. Several slide-offs & crashes in area AND other locations.

Anticipate delays and please scan the road ahead. #MoWx #MidMoWx pic.twitter.com/jXsiH9gvhw

— MSHP Troop F (@MSHPTrooperF) February 26, 2020

A separation in less than 40 miles made all the difference in road conditions across Nebraska as snow spread across portions of the state early on Tuesday. One spot along I-80 near Elm Creek was completely bare as snow and wind whipped through and created treacherous conditions near Willow Island on Tuesday morning, according to the National Weather Service (NWS) in Hastings.

Images showing two different stretches of interstate taken at the same time less than 40 miles apart on Tuesday morning, Feb. 25, 2020, showed how quickly road conditions can deteriorate for motorists traveling through Nebraska. (NWS / Nebraska Department of Transportation)

Because of the southeastward shift in the swath of snow, St. Louis picked up nearly an inch of accumulation by late morning on Wednesday. Indianapolis and Terre Haute, Indiana, could see some moderate accumulation as places in the northern reaches of the state had picked up a range of about 1 to 2 inches of snow. Cleveland, Akron, Columbus and Dayton, Ohio, could all see some light accumulations as well.

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Precipitation will begin as rain across central and eastern Ohio, western Pennsylvania and western New York, and it will stay wet for a while until the two storms join forces and pull in enough cold air for rain to transition to snow. The changeover to wintry weather will occur late Wednesday to Wednesday night.

Despite the southeastward shift in the snow, related to the push of drier and colder air across the north, snow is unlikely to accumulate over the immediate Ohio Valley, except toward the Pittsburgh area.

Little to no snow is anticipated from the storm in Des Moines, Iowa; Milwaukee and Madison, Wisconsin; and Traverse City, Michigan.

As the storm lifts northeastward into Canada, strong winds around the intensifying storm will pull much colder air across the region from Wednesday night to Friday.

People who encountered wet or slushy conditions on their travels during the day Wednesday may have trouble for the drive home Wednesday evening or the morning drive Thursday.

"Temperatures will drop rapidly behind the storm to cause untreated wet and slushy areas to freeze Wednesday night," AccuWeather Meteorologist Mary Gilbert said.

Related:

Intruding chill to snap warm spell across the eastern US by the weekend
Why do bridges freeze before roads?
Snowstorm to target interior Northeast as I-95 corridor remains in snow drought

Winds could be strong enough to result in sporadic power outages. Blowing and drifting of the snow on the ground can keep property owners and road crews busy. Roads and sidewalks that were shoveled during or shortly after the storm concluded may become snow-covered once again.

As colder air filters over the largely unfrozen Great Lakes, bands of lake-effect snow and snow squalls will develop as the storm begins to pull away. Only 9% of the Great Lakes are covered in ice this year, compared to 56% total ice extent on Feb. 25 last year, according to the Great Lakes Environmental Research Laboratory National Ice Center.

Within the lake-effect, the visibility can plummet to near zero at times with a locally heavy accumulation on top of the snow from the storm and renewed slippery travel.

Some areas right along and south of the Ohio River may not have too long to wait for accumulating snow as a weak storm may produce a light to moderate accumulation from Thursday night to early Saturday.

Keep checking back on AccuWeather.com and stay tuned to the AccuWeather Network on DirecTV, Frontier and Verizon Fios.

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