Supracrustal rocks offer a window into tectonic processes of the early Earth, since they are common in the Archean lithosphere. However, these rocks are usually affected by several episodes of metamorphism that can compromise their UPb systematics, leading to equivocal interpretations of depositional ages and sources. In northeast Brazil, supracrustal rocks are frequent within the Archean basement of the São José do Campestre Massif. These metapelitic migmatites show a high-temperature mineral assemblage, with garnet + sillimanite ± spinel and retrograde cordierite, with abundant anatectic melt migration at conditions of upper amphibolite to granulite facies. Zircon UPb dating coupled to trace elements analysis through LA-ICP-MS, as well as zircon internal zoning patterns suggest a maximum depositional age of 3305 ± 16 Ma followed by high-temperature metamorphism in the Mesoarchean, Paleoproterozoic and Neoproterozoic. Mesoarchean high temperature metamorphism occurred between 3084 ± 4 and 3006 ± 6 Ma and generated a wide range of textures that could be grouped in, at least, three stages of zircon growth. The first, during prograde heating, led to dissolution of detrital cores through the process of Ostwald Ripening and reprecipitation in oscillatory zoned rims. The second, probably at peak conditions, occurred above the stability of monazite, as evidenced by high Th/U ratios within zircon grains, rounded shape and sector-zoned cores. The third, during retrograde cooling, is mostly driven by garnet breakdown, and resulted in the crystallization of convoluted rims. Ti-in-zircon temperatures indicate minimum temperatures of 712 ± 21 °C for prograde/retrograde stages and 881 ± 50 °C for peak conditions. The Paleoarchean sedimentation and Mesoarchean metamorphism are coeval with similar events in Kaapvaal and Dharwar Cratons (South Africa and South India, respectively), but show no correlation to any Archean domains in South America to date. Solid-state recrystallization during the Paleoproterozoic (ca. 2.0 Ga) and the Neoproterozoic (ca. 0.6 Ga) correlates with orogenic events in both the Borborema Province and São Francisco Craton, suggesting a common evolution since the Rhyacian.