Before settlement
The name, and the Paiute homeland
Duck Creek takes its name from the water itself. The creek rises in the lava fields north of Navajo Lake, where Sage Valley Creek and Deer Hollow Creek meet, then flows east and vanishes into the Duck Creek Sinks — porous volcanic ground that swallows the stream underground. Ducks gather on its quiet stretches, and the name stuck. The naming is documented by John W. Van Cott in Utah Place Names.
Long before any of that was written down, this was Southern Paiute country. The whole high tableland is the Markagunt Plateau — a Paiute word meaning “highland of trees” — and the Paiute name for nearby Navajo Lake was Pa-cu-ay, “Cloud Lake.” The Paiute Indian Tribe of Utah is headquartered today in Cedar City, at the foot of the mountain.