| ICEFALL | Crumbling chunks from a glacier |
| BERG | Chunk from a glacier, perhaps |
| AIOLI | Odd chunks from a big loin smothering ordinary sauce |
| EDAM | Cheesy chunk from a gifted amateur (4) |
| ICEBERGALLEY | Newfoundland's coast, as it is dubbed, because of the floating-by-chunks from the Arctic: 2 wds. |
| CUTINTO | Take a chunk from tunic to be re-sewn (3,4) |
| ICEBERG | Variety of crisp lettuce named for its original shipment in crushed frozen water or "glace"; a word from Dutch for a calf or a growler, broken away from a glacier; or, a person considered cold or Scro |
| CALF | A floating growler detached from a glacier/iceberg; a young buffalo, cow, elephant, giraffe, rhino, whale or other vituline specimen; or, old slang for a dolt or hobbledehoy (4) |
| MORAINE | Debris from a glacier or a mine, perhaps |
| CALVE | Make an iceberg from a glacier |
| AARE | European river that originates from a glacier |
| ICEBERGS | Which large floating masses are detached from a glacier, and carried out to sea (8) |
| RHONE | Which European river originates from a glacier of the same name? (5) |
| SERAC | Named after a variety of white Swiss cheese which it is said to resemble, a pinnacle of ice among crevasses of a glacier (5) |
| CREVASSE | Crack in a mountain slope or a glacier (8) |
| STOSS | Facing the direction from which a glacier moves |
| ACIERATE | Trapped in a glacier, a teetotaller appears to turn to steel (8) |
| STRIA | Scratch left by a glacier on rocks, or a streak or ridge in muscle tissue (5) |
| ATTLEE | A prime minister in the UK - or a glacier in Antarctica (6) |
| BERGSCHRUND | Crevasse formed at the head of a glacier between moving and non-moving ice, also known as a rimaye; German, 'mountain cleft' (11) |