| PHYSICALGEOGRAPHY | The study of the natural features of the earth's surface (8,9) |
| SCENERY | The general appearance of the natural features of a landscape |
| TYPOGRAPHER | A person who studies the natural features of the surface of the Earth (11) |
| GEOGRAPHERS | Experts in the study of the physical features of the earth (11) |
| DUNE | E.g. one of the natural features at Braunton Burrows in Devon (4) |
| LANDFORM | Natural feature of the earth's surface |
| SCIENCE | From the Latin for "to know", a word for any branch of knowledge including the arts originally, later for the more specific study of the natural and physical world (7) |
| ECOL | Study of the natural world (abbr.) |
| TILT | Feature of the earth's axis that causes the seasons |
| LANDSCAPING | Improving the natural features of a garden by placing sand all over the place |
| TOPOGRAPHY | Italian flower chart in model displays the natural features of an area (10) |
| GEOGRAPHY | From the Greek for "earth writing", the study of natural features of said planet's surface; or, a gazetteer describing such phenomena (9) |
| MENDELSSOHN | Surname of the German composer who wrote an overture about a natural feature of Staffa (11) |
| NIAGARA | This rhododendron cultivar is also a river, gorge and natural feature on the border of the Canadian Province of Ontario and the US state of New York (7) |
| AWAKENING | "The whole art of teaching is only the art of ... the natural curiosity of young minds for the purpo |
| APHAKIA | Absence of the natural lens of the eye (usually resulting from the removal of cataracts). |
| WHITE | Author of The Natural History and Antiquities of Selborne who was one of the first to speculate that swallows migrate despite the traditional belief that they hibernate (5) |
| FLORES | Lesser Sunda Island with the largest town Maumere; one of the natural habitats of the Komodo dragon |
| HEATHY | Comprising ling, gorse and bracken, habitats forming part of the natural landscape of areas such as the Quantock Hills or the New Forest (6) |
| SLOANE | Credited with the invention of drinking chocolate, a physician and collector whose material formed the basis of the Natural History Museum (6) |