answer:Reminds me of the way they make steel for swords. You take layers of high carbon and low carbon iron and pound them together, fold them over, and pound again, and do this over and over. Depending on the way you do the folding, you get patterns that sound similar to the ones you are describing. However, you are talking about aluminum, which is a pretty weak metal, I think. Perhaps they have done something similar, with some other material to strengthen the aluminum enough to make it a useful arrow. Here’s a short piece about aluminum metallurgy. Looks like aluminum is alloyed with silicon, zinc, and magnesium, among other things. This picture (I hope the link works), shows an aluminum alloy dagger which has some iridescence. This is a more technical document about heat treating aluminum to make it more corrosion resistant. In point number three, it says, “3. The method of claim 2 for producing a golden-yellow iridescent conversion coating used for salt spray corrosion protection of an aluminum surface, particularly for 7000 series aluminum, wherein the amount of concentrated nitric acid added tothe solution is approximately 8 cubic centimeters.” This sounds kind of like what you’re talking about.