| ILLIMANI | A mountain peak in the Andes in Bolivia (21,201 feet high). |
| SAJAMA | A mountain peak in the Andes in Bolivia (21,391 feet high). |
| GALAN | A mountain peak in the Andes in Argentina (21,654 feet high). |
| LAUDO | Mountain peak in the Andes in Argentina (5) |
| SAMANALA | A mountain peak in south central Sri Lanka (7,360 feet high). |
| ALIVE | Book by Piers Paul Read based on the survival of a rugby team whose aeroplane crashed in the Andes in 1972 (5) |
| RANIER | A mountain peak in central Washington (6) |
| SOUFRIERE | La -; active stratovolcano in Guadeloupe which is the highest mountain peak in the Lesser Antilles (9) |
| ACONCAGUA | Highest peak of the Andes, in west-central Argentina near the Chilean border (9) |
| EVEREST | The highest mountain peak in the world. (7) |
| EIGER | Mountain peak in the Bernese Alps, notorious for its North Face (5) |
| MUMMY | '___ Juanita' is the name given to the well-preserved remains of a sacrificed Incan girl discovered in the Peruvian Andes in 1995 (5) |
| MANTUA | This is a city in the region of Lombardy. Roman colonization began about 220 BCE, and the poet Virgil was born at nearby Andes in 70 BCE. In Romeo and Juliet (act 3, scene 5), Juliet says, "It is some |
| MUNRO | Any mountain peak in Scotland over 3000 feet high (5) |
| CHINCHILLA | Small rodent noted for its fur native to the Andes in South America (10) |
| KAMET | A mountain in the Himalayas in northern India (25,450 feet high). |
| MAKALU | A mountain in the Himalayas in Nepal (27,790 feet high). |
| BRIGHTER | To look more cheerful is correct in a mountain peak (8) |
| HENNIN | It consists of a three- to four-foot high cone of stiff paper or starched linen that was covered with silk or other precious materials. In the middle of the 15th century, it was introduced to the Cour |
| AIGUILLE | French "needle" whose sharp point is reflected in a mountain peak, pinnacle of rock or slender awl (8) |