| TAKER | One removing last of haemoglobin from large vessel |
| FLAGON | Wave forward from large vessel (6) |
| TALLSHIP | High, smoking first joint from huge vessel in the main (4,4) |
| CREW | Team removing last of luggage from railway junction |
| TOUGH | Ruffian removing last of water from receptacle in field? |
| ALLY | Colleague removing last of garbage from narrow street |
| MISER | Cheeseparer removing last of Roquefort from man (5) |
| STUPEFY | Shock fussy pet badly, removing last of treats |
| ICARUS | High-flyer's saucier gyrating, removing last of lingerie (6) |
| ROUE | Rake path, removing last of grit (4) |
| EXTRICATED | Removing last of clothes, tried sex act in new positions, then disentangled |
| CAPUCHINS | Salute scallies removing last of their hoodies? |
| THRUMS | Barrie's village removing last of the Bacardi and Captain Morgan (6) |
| ANAEMIA | Condition as a result of a deficiency of haemoglobin in the blood (7) |
| IRON | Element useful in the formation of haemoglobin in red blood cells (4) |
| PORPHYRIA | Rare disease of haemoglobin metabolism (9) |
| ANEMIA | Lack of haemoglobin (US spelling) (6) |
| PLUMBS | What a skilled labourer does, after removing last of fat below sink initially (6) |
| PERUTZ | Max Ferdinand ___, Austrian-born British biochemist; shared the 1962 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for studies in the structure of haemoglobin (6) |
| DIEOFF | Cross the great divide one by one, removing violins from field of vision (3,3) |