Massive blizzard snow totals are in, 52 inches was Michigan’s top snow

The massive storm system brought heavy snowfall for two to three days across Michigan’s Upper Peninsula and northern Lower Michigan. Here are the official snow calculations from the National Weather Service offices in northern Michigan.
And the winner or loser, depending on your perspective, is Round Lake, MI, located in Alger County in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula, about 13 miles south of Munising, MI.
These are snowstorm totals for the entire stormy period.
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Round Lake — 52.0 inches
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Lake Cusino – 48.5 inches
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Lake of the Woods — 42.5 inches
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Three Lakes – 40.0 inches
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Mount Arvon – 39.0 inches
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National Mine – 38.6 inches
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Menominee — 34.0 inches
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Manistique — 26.5 inches
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Carlshend—25.8 inches
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Gladstone – 24.5 inches
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Iron Mountain—24.1 inches
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Crystal Falls – 24.0 inches
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Kingsford—23.4 inches
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Mineral Hills – 22.0 inches
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Garden Corners — 19.8 inches
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Watersmeet — 6.5 inches
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Painesdale—4.8 inches
Courtesy of the National Weather Service in Gaylord, the entire snowstorm is coming from the northern part of Lower Michigan.
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Wolverine—28.0 inches
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Charlevoix — 26.0 inches
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Cedarville — 21.2 inches
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East Jordan – 22.2 inches
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Harbor Springs – 18.2 inches
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Northport – 15.0 inches
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Mancelona – 13.5 inches
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Suttons Bay – 13.8 inches
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Otsego Lake State – 13.0 inches
Some snowfall records and liquid equivalent precipitation records were broken with this storm. We will cover these later MLive.com/weather.
Marquette and Negaunee set new two-day snowfall records.
This is an incredible feat, considering Marquette and Negaunee are some of the snowiest cities in the United States east of the Rockies.
If you want to see more photos of the historic snowstorm, here they are Michigan Weather Facebook groupmany people posted Old Man Winter’s artwork about this storm
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