March 2017 North American blizzard

From March 13–15, 2017, a major late-season blizzard, unofficially referred to as Winter Storm Stella by The Weather Channel and other media, or more commonly referred to as the Blizzard of 2017, Blizzard Eugene, the Pi Day Storm, or the Pi Day Blizzard, affected the Northeastern United States, New England and Canada, dumping up to 3 feet (36 in; 91 cm) of snow in the hardest hit areas, mainly New York, Vermont, New Hampshire and southern Quebec. Forming out of an extratropical cyclone near the Northwest, the storm system dived into the northern portions of the United States, dropping light to moderate snow across the Great Lakes, Upper Midwest on March 11–12 before reaching the Ohio Valley the next day.

Source: Wikipedia — March 2017 North American blizzard (CC BY-SA 4.0)

March 2017 North American blizzard

From March 13–15, 2017, a major late-season blizzard, unofficially referred to as Winter Storm Stella by The Weather Channel and other media, or more commonly referred to as the Blizzard of 2017, Blizzard Eugene, the Pi Day Storm, or the Pi Day Blizzard, affected the Northeastern United States, New England and Canada, dumping up to 3 feet (36 in; 91 cm) of snow in the hardest hit areas, mainly New York, Vermont, New Hampshire and southern Quebec. Forming out of an extratropical cyclone near the Northwest, the storm system dived into the northern portions of the United States, dropping light to moderate snow across the Great Lakes, Upper Midwest on March 11–12 before reaching the Ohio Valley the next day.

Source: Wikipedia "March 2017 North American blizzard" · CC BY-SA 4.0

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