The lithic assemblage excavated from the Mousterian site of Nahal Mahanayeem Outlet (NMO) enables us to reconstruct a brief moment in the life of the Middle Palaeolithic hunter. The site, located on the eastern bank of the Jordan River at its outflow south from the Hula Valley, is a short-term, task specific hunting location at the shore of the Paleo-Hula Lake. Dated by OSL to ca. 65,000 years ago, the site has yielded a small assemblage of flint artifacts alongside exceptionally well-preserved animal bones and botanical remains. While only some 1000 artifacts have been counted, the lithic assemblage has the highest percentage of tools ever recorded in a Levantine Mousterian site. The primary lithic groups represented are pointed elements (over 10% of the entire assemblage) and cutting tools (over 5%). Other tool types typical of Mousterian sites, such as scrapers, are either absent or represented in very small numbers. The uniqueness of the assemblage is further highlighted by refitted sequences that, when combined with technological observations, suggest a non-Levallois, “blade-core like” reduction sequence. The NMO assemblage represents the tool kit used for the hunting and butchering of large mammals by a group of Levantine Mousterian hunters. It enables us to explore what tool types were selected for slaughtering and carcass processing, which tools were brought to the site and which were produced on site, what tools were left behind, and much more. The site was inhabited for a very short period, providing an opportunity to study hunting practices and human life ways in a resolution rarely possible for Late Pleistocene sites.