| AILSACRAIG | "Paddy's milestone" off the coast of South Ayrshire |
| CARRICK | Part of South Ayrshire which had Maybole as its main town (7) |
| ARUBA | Dutch territory just off the coast of South America |
| SKOMER | Small island off the coast of South Wales (6) |
| VESPUCCI | Amerigo, Florentine navigator noted for his exploration of the coast of South America (8) |
| CAPELOBSTER | Small crustacean native to the coast of South Africa |
| SPENCER | Name a gulf on the coast of South Australia (7) |
| MALABAR | The Coast of south west India stretches from Goa to Cape Comorin (7) |
| HUMBOLDT | Name for the cold-water current of the southeast Pacific Ocean running along the western coast of South America. Except during El Nino periods, this current brings fog to the nearby coast but also hel |
| TROON | Town in South Ayrshire famous for its 'Royal' golf course, one of the hosts of the Open Golf Championship |
| SPANISHMAIN | Former name of the northern coast of South America between the Orinoco River and Panama (7,4) |
| ELNINO | The weather pattern over the Pacific Ocean producing drought in Australian and floods on the west coast of South America (2,4) |
| ESTUARIES | Knysna seahorses are found only in the Knysna, Keurbooms and Swartvlei ___ on the south coast of South Africa |
| CHILOE | Island off the west coast of South America |
| RIVERPLATE | English name for an estuary on the south-east coast of South America (5,5) |
| ATACAMA | Driest nonpolar desert in the world, on the Pacific coast of South America mostly within northern Chile (7) |
| FRENCHGUIANA | Overseas region of France on the North Atlantic coast of South America whose capital is Cayenne |
| ULSAN | A port on the Southeast coast of South Korea; home to the world's largest car assembly plant (5) |
| CAPE | Rocky headland on the Atlantic coast of South Africa named it Cabo das Tormentas by the Portuguese explorer Bartolomeu Dias in 1488 (4,2,4,4) |
| OFGOODHOPE | Rocky headland on the Atlantic coast of South Africa named it Cabo das Tormentas by the Portuguese explorer Bartolomeu Dias in 1488 (4,2,4,4) |