<p indent="0mm">Whether granulite terranes can preserve prograde metamorphic records is a perturbing topic in metamorphic petrology, and related research is rare. This is mainly because the metamorphic records of the granulite terranes have information asymmetry. Generally, the mineral assemblages and compositions of granulite-facies rocks are considered to reflect peak and retrograde metamorphism, rather than prograde metamorphism. However, this assumption must be made with caution. Case studies of granulites from the junction area of Shanxi and Hebei province in the North China Craton suggest that garnet could serve as “temperature and pressure resistant containers” under granulite-facies conditions, and retain the evidence of pre-peak metamorphism. For pelitic granulites, their protoliths are supracrustal rocks, and must have undergone prograde metamorphic processes from the Earth’s surface to the deep crust. Therefore, a confirmatory study seeking prograde metamorphic records for pelitic granulites from the Huai’an-Datong area was conducted. In the studied pelitic granulites, inclusions in garnet display well-preserved microstructural zoning, with radical zonal distribution patterns: Crowded quartz grains in the core, a few K-feldspar-kyanite-bearing assemblages in the mantle, and some sillimanite flakes in the rim. The major element zoning (here, major endmember proportions X<sub>Sps</sub>, X<sub>Alm</sub>, X<sub>Pyr</sub>, and X<sub>Grs</sub> are used) of garnet is relatively homogeneous. However, the high rare earth elements (HREEs) exhibit bell-shaped profiles decreasing from the core to the rim. This suggests that even if the major elements of garnet are homogenous due to high-temperature diffusion, microstructural zoning and some trace elements with slow diffusion rates could be protected from peak- and retro-grade high-temperature modification. For garnet mafic granulites, their protoliths are considered as gabbro dykes, and there is no robust evidence of prograde metamorphism from the upper to lower crust; therefore, their tectonic significance is unclear. Here, an exploratory study of prograde metamorphism for garnet mafic granulites from the Huai’an-Hengshan area was conducted based on the study experience of pelitic garnet. In the investigated mafic granulites, garnet also displays a zoned distribution of various mineral assemblages from its center to rim, including quartz- and titanite/ilmenite-bearing assemblages in the core, rutile-bearing assemblages in the outer mantle to the inner rim, and a resorbed rim. Fortunately, garnet of the mafic granulites displays well-preserved compositional growth zoning patterns, with bell-shaped X<sub>Sps</sub>, increasing X<sub>Pyr</sub> from core to mantle, and a resorbed rim (X<sub>Sps</sub>). The HREEs (for example, Yb) show bell-shaped patterns similar to those of the X<sub>Sps</sub>. Both textural and compositional zoning patterns in the studied mafic granulites documented multiple generations of garnet growth history from the prograde to peak metamorphic stages. These findings provide robust metamorphic evidence for the Paleoproterozoic subduction and assembly of the Jin-Yu Mobile Belt in the North China Craton. The above two case studies suggest that high-temperature granulite-facies metamorphism may not completely reset the multi-generation growth information retained in the garnet. In contrast, minerals in the matrix only record the history of intensive re-equilibration at the peak or rehydration retrogression metamorphism. Thus, garnet is an important archive of prograde metamorphic information. This study further suggests that caution should be exercised when determining the peak<italic> P-T</italic> conditions of granulites using garnet core compositions.