| CARNAC | Site in Brittany of around 3,000 megalithic standing stones (6) |
| STONECIRCLE | Ring of megalithic standing rocks (5,6) |
| CIRCLE | An arrangement of standing stones, such as that at Avebury; a ring of flattened grain stalks in a crop field; or, a planet's orbit (6) |
| STATUS | Standing stones that are turned upright: Stonehenge, earliest of all (6) |
| STELAE | Standing stones, each allowed special mounting (6) |
| QUOITS | Rings for encircling hobs or pegs in a game of the same name; or, megalithic cromlechs or dolmens such as any of those in Cornwall including the "giant's house" (6) |
| DOLMEN | Type of megalithic tomb featuring large rocks found in parts of Ireland. (6) |
| ESTATE | Standing stone's finish, say (6) |
| MENHIR | Tall manmade standing stone of a kind erected in western Europe in Bronze Age or Neolithic times (6) |
| SARSEN | Type of sandstone block found in Southern England, used by the megalithic builders of Avebury and Stonehenge (6) |
| ONEIDA | 'People of the Standing Stone' of the Iroquois Confederacy |
| BARROW | Megalithic burial mound; tumulus (6) |
| DARTMOOR | National Park and AONB in Devon, site of Castle Drogo and several menhirs or standing stones including that in Drizzlecombe (8) |
| MOON | Satellite whose beams light up the centre of 13 Lewisian standing stones every 18.6 years during the phenomenon of the lunar standstill (4) |
| STONEHENGE | Group of standing stones on Salisbury Plain in Wiltshire |
| TEA | With around 3,000 varieties including Earl Grey, English breakfast and Darjeeling, a beverage derived from the leaves of a species of camellia (3) |
| IRONAGE | Period of human history around 3,000 years ago |
| AVEBURY | Here one finds standing stones have limitless energy set in earth |
| CROMLECH | Prehistoric circle of standing stones (8) |
| CRAIGNISH | Peninsula in Argyll with ruined forts and standing stones (9) |