BUFFALO, NY – A low-pressure system over the Great Lakes region continues to fuel lake-effect rain bands on the eastern sides of lakes Michigan, Erie and Ontario and the southern side of Lake Superior.

The National Weather Service offices in Buffalo, New York, and Cleveland described the setup as a “long-duration” and “prolonged” lake-effect rain event, respectively. A widespread 1-2 inches of rain, with locally up to 3 inches, along the Interstate 90 corridor between Buffalo and Cleveland through the end of the week.

Buffalo recorded 1.81 inches of rain on Wednesday, breaking a 113-year-old daily rainfall record.

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Three-hour radar loop.
(FOX Weather)

Bands of heavy rain were seen on time-lapse video from Detroit, Cleveland and Buffalo on Wednesday. Tuesday’s storms even produced frozen water droplets known as graupel in Finleyville, Pennsylvania.

Social media video showed cars driving through flooded roads in Erie, Pa., on Thursday as the lake-effect rainfall impacted the region.

Lake-effect rain refers to a phenomenon that generally occurs during the fall when cold air moves over the warmer Great Lakes, creating instability in the atmosphere, causing rain and potentially severe storms to develop. That precipitation is currently being driven to the east by westerly winds.

Water temperatures are more than 4 degrees above average across all the Great Lakes.

WHAT IS LAKE-EFFECT SNOW?

This graphic shows the system responsible for lake-effect rain across the Great Lakes.
(FOX Weather)

According to the FOX Forecast Center, overnight low temperatures are in the 30s and 40s, potentially cold enough for some very light snow near the Upper Peninsula of Michigan.

In addition to the rain, the lake-effect event brought widespread wind gusts of 30–40 mph across much of the region through Thursday, making the cool temperatures feel even colder.

The heavy rain began to taper off Thursday evening, with some precipitation lingering and shifting south through Friday.

While the deluge reduced visibility for drivers, hampering travel, the rain will be beneficial for parts of Michigan and western New York that are in moderate to severe drought, according to the U.S. Drought Monitor.

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