| ASSEVERATE | Declare Everest as a source (10) |
| TEABERRIES | Has a go at drinking a beer, developed as a source of wintergreen |
| SOLARPANEL | A device designed to absorb the sun's rays as a source of energy for generating electricity (5,5) |
| GOLDDIGGER | A person who treats an intimate relationship chiefly as a source of material gain (4,6) |
| ACCUSATION | Represent first-class coca nuts as a source of blame? (10) |
| SESAMESEED | Seas seemed worked out as a source of oil |
| DISPENSARY | Dry pansies out as a source of drugs |
| OPIUMPOPPY | I'm experimenting with puppy poo as a source of narcotic (5,5) |
| MEALTICKET | Person depended on as a source of regular income (4,6) |
| ENGINE | Word for cunning/skill originally, later a weapon of war; a machine, such as a locomotive, as a source of power; or, any agent to effect a purpose (6) |
| STURGEON | Common name of a ganoid fish, such as a beluga or sevruga, valued as a source of caviar and isinglass (8) |
| CITE | Name as a source, as in a footnote |
| SORE | Bend a metal container as a source of irritation |
| ACORN | Navy going after a company as a source of oak |
| TIMOTHY | Grass known as meadow cat's-tail, used as a source of hay for horses (7) |
| TEREBINTH | A small southern European tree yielding resin formerly used as a source of turpentine |
| OXFORDCOMPANION | Italics in clues indicate one of the seven ____ books owned by today's setter, as a source of the Q and A |
| BEETS | Plant with edible leaves and red roots eaten as vegetable and valued for its red roots as a source of sugar |
| KENDALMINTCAKE | Sugar-based confection originating from a Cumbrian town and used as a source of energy by climbers and mountaineers (6,4,4) |
| ANCHORAGE | A new unexciting job collecting silver as a source of security |