use an ironball
Mean Look Arena Trap (ability)
Trap or hazard
says it in the question ... urgh !!!
A gator pit is a trench or pit where alligators are trapped or kept, often as a form of entertainment or for hunting purposes. A razor pit is a term sometimes used to describe a trap or booby trap that is set with sharp blades or razor blades to injure or harm intruders or trespassers.
only one. Use sleep and false swipe with arena trap and then it's done :-)
You have two chances to catch Mesprit. If you accidentally make it faint both times, you can't catch it anymore. If you made Mesprit faint once, find it, trap it, lower its hp to 1 using false swipe (you should have gotten the TM), let it escape, then encounter it again and use a quick ball.
The Burmese tiger trap is a type of hunting trap used in Southeast Asia that consists of a large pit covered with branches and leaves to camouflage it. It is designed to capture tigers by luring them into falling into the pit when they walk over it.
Using the marking map, find Mesprit, if you have the master ball, use it. If not, Trap it with Mean look or a move like that. Another option is to use an ability (Shadow tag or Arena trap).
Build the pit-fall trap, using logs and a knife in special pits. Tease it with a teasing stick. Then run back to the pit and jump over it. The Larupia will often jump over the pit and attack you. Since it will not jump the same pit twice in a row, you must move to another nearby hot-spot to build another pit-fall and try again( i recommend building 2-3 pits before teasing the larupia). The pit-fall trap will collapse after a certain amount of time. You collect furs when emptying the trap, which can be made into hunter gear in the Varrock fancy-dress shop.
When the dog falls into the pit trap. That's action and it involves falling.
disecting microscope
You do not specify the kind of trap you mean. In Navajo a "booby-trap" or man-trap is dineh-ba-whoa-blehi. An ambush is khac-da. Navajo and Zuni people used pit traps for hunting animals; tye-nde is "pits where animals fall in".