| MONOLITH | Block of natural stone, such as Uluru (8) |
| MONOLITHS | Large stones such as Uluru |
| BASILICA | Bishop with a stone, such as opal, in church |
| GEM | From "bud, jewel", a precious stone, such as the tanzanite or turquoise symbolic of December; a highly-valued person, regarded as treasure; or, one of the miniature reference books by HarperCollins (3 |
| AYERSROCK | Colossal natural monolith also known as Uluru |
| JADE | A stone such as nephrite; the typical green colour of said mineral; or, a worn-out horse (4) |
| 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) |
| QUARTZ | Stone such as amethyst or cairngorm (6) |
| ETCHED | ___ in stone (Such as ancient carvings) |
| MENHIR | Prehistoric standing stone such as those that make up Stonehenge (6) |
| STELA | Upright stone, such as found at Stonehenge; least (anag.) (5) |
| SEMIPRECIOUS | Classification of stones such as amethyst, garnet, and jade (12) |
| AYERS | --- Rock, former name of a giant monolith in Australia now known as Uluru (5) |
| AYRES | Rock also known as Uluru |
| ROCK | Giant monolith in Australia which is now known as Uluru (4) |
| DRUPE | Botanical word for a fruit with a stone, such as a peach, cherry, nectarine, apricot or olive (5) |
| PEBBLE | A beach stone such as the rare rhomb porphyry or one used for rocaille grotto ornamentation (6) |
| LITHOGLYPH | Greek-derived word for a carving, engraving, incision or sculpture on a stone such as a precious gem (10) |
| CAIRNS | Constructions assembled in rough natural stone initially (6) |
| MASON | Worker with natural stone |