| NATURALRESOURCE | Oil or timber |
| RESOURCE | Natural supply, as oil or timber |
| SHAKES | Musical trilloes; a short word for smoothie-like drinks; informal term for earthquakes or tremors; or, cracks/fissures in rock or timber (6) |
| NIBS | Birds' beaks; crushed cocoa or coffee beans; ink-distributing tips of fountain pens; or, timber poles of carriages or wagons (4) |
| WEDGES | Blocks or chocks of cake, cheese, metal or timber with thin ends figuratively synonymous with "tips of icebergs" or "slippery slopes" (6) |
| JOIST | Steel or timber structural support (5) |
| WOLF | Gray or timber |
| WOOD | Lumber or timber |
| LUMBER | Plank or timber |
| YARDMEN | Persons working in a railway or timber yard (7) |
| SASH | Piece of cloth or timber at the bus terminus (4) |
| STADDLE | Word linked with "stones" for mushroom-shaped pedestals traditionally used for raising beehives, seasonal hayricks or timber-framed granaries above ground level (7) |
| GROYNE | Low wall or timber barrier built on a seashore to prevent erosion and sanddrifting (6) |
| FLUME | Narrow artificial channel conveying water, e.g. for the transportation of logs or timber (5) |
| LOG | Cut down the trees or timber on land |
| OAK | Nothing but a piece of teak or timber (3) |
| TIMBERED | Furnished with or made of wood or timbers. |
| PIGMENTS | Powders mixed with oil or water to create paints; dyes or inks generally; or, carotenoids, chlorophylls or other colours in animal or plant cells (8) |
| WICK | Dialect for a creek, dairy farm, hamlet or village; or, related to "roll of lint, yarn", a long twist of cotton fibres by which a candle or lamp's flame is fed or fuelled with beeswax, oil or tallow ( |
| OLEUM | Or brass or plonk or "olive oil" or wheat: videas, Plautus Truculentus 33 |