Hopefully they hear sounds/banging and it grows from there. Only have to hear it once. And it won't be on top or sides, you know those contains will be buried.
Then it just explodes from there... find one, you start investigating it all. And then everything starts unraveling from there.
A few considerations: any human cargo would be shipped with food and a means to keep it alive to its destination which is presumably several days away (Rotterdam?). That same human cargo can go several days without food as well and would likely be shipped with an ample supply of water. They're probably still alivd but approaching the end of their clock.
If people start to die in those containers they will stink. A lot. Those containers cannot be air tight or the human cargo would suffocate.
We have methods of detecting trace elements and substances that tip off when bad materials, goods, or other things are inside of containers. For instance, detecting radiation for nukes, detecting lactic acid (stress sweat) for people, etc.
They weren't set to arrive at their destination for quite awhile. If they are pulled out now it would actually be sooner than had they completed their trip I believe.
So if they unload by container how is anything found? Surely theyd have to open them to find anything?
Hopefully they hear sounds/banging and it grows from there. Only have to hear it once. And it won't be on top or sides, you know those contains will be buried.
Then it just explodes from there... find one, you start investigating it all. And then everything starts unraveling from there.
A few considerations: any human cargo would be shipped with food and a means to keep it alive to its destination which is presumably several days away (Rotterdam?). That same human cargo can go several days without food as well and would likely be shipped with an ample supply of water. They're probably still alivd but approaching the end of their clock.
If people start to die in those containers they will stink. A lot. Those containers cannot be air tight or the human cargo would suffocate.
Dogs. They will look for explosives, weapons, perishables...
We have methods of detecting trace elements and substances that tip off when bad materials, goods, or other things are inside of containers. For instance, detecting radiation for nukes, detecting lactic acid (stress sweat) for people, etc.
It's been a minute. May be dead bodies now.
They weren't set to arrive at their destination for quite awhile. If they are pulled out now it would actually be sooner than had they completed their trip I believe.