The rate of mineral weathering depends on many factors, including rock particle size, soil type, ambient temperature, precipitation, and irrigation. While most of the applied minerals will ultimately weather, the effective CO₂ drawdown should only be credited when the weathering actually occurs. At a given point in time, it is possible to measure how much rock has weathered via elemental analysis or by tracking changes in the concentration of tracer elements that originate in the applied rocks and persist in the soil after rock weathering. However, these measurements do not tell one what portion of the alkalinity released through weathering has resulted in stored CO₂ (see Alkalinity Loss, Secondary Mineral Formation, and Secondary Precipitation for more details). Alternatively, the pH and alkalinity of the water leaving the weathering site can be continuously measured to provide an estimate of how much alkalinity originating from the weathered rock has resulted in stored CO₂ that is exported from the system as dissolved inorganic carbon. This approach provides an upper bound on the non-weathered portion of rock and, if used as the primary estimate of drawdown, could simplify the overall quantification approach. Both approaches — monitoring of the rock in the weathering site, and monitoring of the alkalinity leaving the weathering site — are areas of active innovation.