Photos provided by Randy Wagner

Since long before the area known as Wyoming became a state in 1890, civilization has been using the Southern corridor of this state for transportation, creating a rich heritage to be shared with visitors. From dinosaur tracks to wagon tracks to railroad tracks to modern interstate highways, join us for a tour of the area that may take you back millions of years and you will become a part of the "Tracks Across Wyoming." Traveling "Tracks Across Wyoming" takes you on a journey through time as well as space. Discover how the stories of westward migration and the nation's first transcontinental railroad and coast-to-coast automobile route are woven throughout southern Wyoming. LEARN MORE

The Tracks Across Wyoming corridor covers a lot of "ologies" – geology, archaeology, paleontology. You can see archaeologists at work in Pine Bluffs and Evanston, find fossils in Kemmerer, and learn about the geology that formed the corridor in Rock Springs.

Each of the communities along the Tracks Across Wyoming corridor has its own personality. You'll visit cattle towns, mining towns, and railroad towns. You'll find very small communities and pretty large cities (well, large by Wyoming standards!). And each has its own unique stories to tell. LEARN MORE.














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