coolant will be on the bottom.
and if the engine runs at all it will be milky. The oil don't just sit in the pan. The rotating assembly and crankcase air movements whip the oil that's in there (pan or otherwise) into a froth. Years ago when I was doing performance engine training, they had a 400" small block chevy with a special oil pan on it for demonstration purposes. The pan had the sides and part of the bottom cut out and replaced with plexiglass so you could see what was going on inside. Trust me, it's a mess. And with that being said, we've (performance engine guru's) have learned that controlling "windage" can result in some pretty serious power improvements. In or close to 2012 when Kawasaki was testing the "new" (at that time) ZX10RR, they found 8 horsepower just by notching the bottoms of the cylinders. A small notch was cut/machined into the bottom of the paired cylinders. Being a 180 degree inline 4, the 2 center pistons are going in exact opposite directions as the two outer pistons. There is air being displaced below the pistons causes some drag, much like sticking your hand out the window while you're driving down the freeway, and controling how that air moves between the outer and inner cylinder led to both reducing aeration of the engine oil, and how it's controlled also helps to reduce the pressure below the piston-which aids in cylinder filling and a reduction of drag. The piston is traveling at about 70mph right in the middle of the stroke and has some surface area, so they calculated how much aero drag is on the pistons, and how to control it (reduce it) and found some power-and longevity.
A sidenote on the track version of the ZX10RR. It uses Titanium connecting rods, made by a company called Pankl. They are over $1100. Each. Some NHRA pro stock engine builders tried Pankl "composite" connecting rods a number of years ago and found some pretty significant power with them. No bearings in the traditional sense, the rods rode directly on the crank, so they were quite light. But they were real expensive and the NHRA outlawed them. I think Pankl also makes rods for the old LS6 engines (titanium) and probably Ducati, Ferrari, and others as well. Not many people have heard of Pankl, but I have-and I use a set in the race car that I picked up on the used market, but they are not Titanium.
Lots of physics involved in engines and to me, it's quite interesting.