We present time-series of lead concentration and isotopic ratio in sediments from two French alpine lakes: Lac du Bourget, a suburban lake, and Lac d'Anterne, a mountain lake nearby the Mont-Blanc Range. This approach aims at differentiating “local” from “regional” inputs by comparing distant sedimentary records. $^{210}$Pb and $^{137}$Cs dating methods were validated by historical events recognition [1-2] providing confident age-depth models spanning the last 250 years. In both lakes the sediment is lead-enriched compared to upper continental crust over the whole records. The human impact reached its maximum around 1970 AD, and then presents a rapid decline. Lead concentration and isotopic composition are correlated. When compared to data ...