| LEYLINE | Supposed connection between features of a landscape having scientific or magical significance in prehistoric times (3,4) |
| EARLINESS | Wrinkles between features in a premature state (9) |
| CHOCOLATEBOX | Type of idyllic landscape having dark brown evergreen tree (9-3) |
| IRIDESCENCE | I travel about amid landscape having shifting colours |
| RUNES | Characters of an ancient Germanic alphabet believed to have a magical significance |
| TANTRIC | Collection of instant riches of magical significance (7) |
| RUNE | Character from an ancient Germanic alphabet (believed to have its own magical significance) (4) |
| SCENERY | The general appearance of the natural features of a landscape |
| PANORAMA | Robert Barker's neologism for a painting of a landscape, hence a word for a wide or unbroken view (8) |
| PROSPECT | A view of a landscape; a mental picture; or, an anticipated event (8) |
| REAGI | From the French for "to laugh", a word used to mean cheerful, chuckling, merry or smiling; or, of a landscape, delightful to the view (5) |
| RIANT | From the French for "to laugh", a word used to mean cheerful, chuckling, merry or smiling; or, of a landscape, delightful to the view (5) |
| DENUDED | Of a landscape, stripped of vegetation or other life (7) |
| BLUEGRASS | Part of a landscape by a colour-blind artist in Kentucky? (9) |
| RELIEF | In geography, the contours of a landscape with reference to variations in its elevation (6) |
| HISTORICAL | Of significance in the past to a port that's a subject of Ancient Studies (10) |
| TRICK | Word for an artifice; an illusion or magical feat; or, a prank, such as that played at Hallowe'en unless a householder produces a treat (5) |
| FETISH | Something believed in certain cultures to be the embodiment of a spirit or magical powers |
| VIEW | A scene or prospect, as of a landscape (4) |
| BOFFIN | Nicodemus ____, in Our Mutual Friend, has been suggested as the source of this word for a scientific or technical expert |