| GOLCONDA | Rich mine or other source of great wealth |
| PIT | A cherry-stone; or, a mine or other sizable hole in the ground from which stone is quarried (3) |
| OUTFALL | Spring, drain or other source of water (7) |
| DEW | Depicted no river or other source of moisture |
| LIGHTS | Word for animals' lungs, so called for their imponderousness; candles, chandeliers, Chinese lanterns, fairy bulbs, lustres, pharoses, windows or other sources of lux or, clues, hints and tips towards |
| GOLDMINE | Source of great wealth, or a potential danger (4,4) |
| BONANZA | Sudden source of great wealth (7) |
| OILWELL | Source of great wealth, painting skilfully |
| LODES | Sources of great wealth |
| ELEVENSES | Snack? Still tucking into other source of sustenance |
| CACAO | Candies and chocolates and others: source of all of those? (5) |
| REEF | Gold- or quartz-bearing vein in the earth; the non-diamondiferous rock of a diamond mine; or, a ridge of coral (4) |
| HEADING | Title of a chapter, page or paragraph; horizontal passage or drift into a mine; or, a curtain top (7) |
| QUOTATION | Passage cited from some other source (9) |
| COLCHIS | In Greek mythology, it was the home of Medea and the destination of the Argonauts, a place of great wealth. In The Merchant of Venice (act 1, scene 1), Bassanio says, "Hang on her temples like a golde |
| STRIP | Kind of mine or mall |
| SHAFT | Part of a mine or elevator |
| FACE | Exposed surface of a cliff, mine or quarry (4) |
| LODE | Rich mine supply |
| SCOURGE | Last of Mohicans needs nerve, ignoring a source of great pain (7) |