The least populated state has seen total eclipses before but possibly never so many people.
Wyoming Department of Transportation spokesman Doug McGee says 536,000 more vehicles than usual crowded Wyoming's roads and highways before, during and after Monday's eclipse.
A partial eclipse occurred throughout the lower 48 states but the big draw was the total eclipse that in Wyoming could be seen from the Tetons to the feedlots of Torrington.
A nightmare: Traffic coming back from Wyoming after the eclipse
Some predicted eclipse watchers would double Wyoming's population of 585,000. That very well may have happened, judging from the traffic count.
10 hours on the road. Still in Wyoming. Came for #eclipse stayed for great American traffic jam. #wanttogohome vid is US 85 #9news pic.twitter.com/up6oggsuSd
— Will Swope (@willswope1) August 22, 2017
Traffic was up 68 percent from average for this time of year. Interstate 25 was especially busy with thousands of visitors from the Colorado Front Range.
Parts of southbound I-25 remained bumper-to-bumper more than 12 hours after the event.