Explore the wonders of nature, culture, and human creation that demonstrate Nebraska is considerably greater than only one state to fly over.
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Approximately 500,000 cranes visit Nebraska annually to rest and feed while traveling from southern North America to Canada.
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The world's largest railroad classification yard is Union Pacific's Bailey Yard. Continually, the yard can accommodate about 10,000 train vehicles that must be arranged and matched.
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Durham Museum, housed in a former Union Station building, is a step back in time thanks to its restored train cars from the late 1800s and early 1900s and Art Deco design.
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Through galleries of artwork, relics, and recreations, this living history museum portrays the tale of the Native Americans and the settlers.
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Being the origin of the tree-planting holiday, Nebraska draws outdoor enthusiasts and visiting families to Arbor Day Farm situated on 260 acres of forest pathways, a garden, an arboretum, and more natural landmarks awaited.
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The largest braided river in the nation, the Platte River, is renowned for being a mile broad and an inch deep.
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With a journey spanning 170 years, the Archway Monument honors the Great Plateau River Road that guided gold seekers, missionaries, and pioneers through Nebraska.
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At Toadstool Geologic Park, which is located in the bed of a river that ran millions of years ago, one can find ancient fossils and eroded sandstone rock formations amidst the Oglala National Grasslands in far northwest Nebraska.
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Jim Reinders decided to construct a duplicate of Stonehenge using 39 vehicle arrayed in the same roles as the enigmatic stones.
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Scotts Bluff, which rose 800 feet above the Plateau, was a landmark and a Native American and emigrant's final resting place. The region saw the passage of over 200,000 individuals in the middle of the 19th century.
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