- Was this warranted? The only reason I can see is that the post was closed as a duplicate, but I've never seen (good) answers deleted just because the question was closed.
- Does this carry a penalty of some sort?

The help center link is generic.
The help center link is generic.
Your original answer was much different than the one you've screenshotted. You even commented such:
@Servy Nope. This was a 100% original answer. I had made an edit, but it appears to have been within the grace period. – Mooseman 18 mins ago
Your original answer was deleted, and it looked nothing like the version you edited it into.
I don't remember the exact text of the answer; but it was something to the effect of:
"Use Flash."
I asked @Shog9 to try to pull up the original text; but he was unable to.
It was deleted for a few reasons:
I understand you're frustrated; but it'd be more helpful to show the community your original answer and have them judge the deletion on the merits of what it was originally (and what I deleted), and not what it was edited into.
It's also important to note that you edited your answer four minutes after I deleted it; just shy of the five minute tracking window.
As a show of good faith, I've undeleted the answer you edited it into.
Was it warranted? It's not the greatest answer of all time (of course, that's largely due to the poor question). It wasn't a link-only answer though.
One reason to delete it would be that if you got an upvote, the Roomba couldn't clean the question up; though if he was that concerned about it, I would expect him to just delete the whole question.
As to a penalty, it won't hurt you at all. Negatively voted answers that are deleted would contribute to an answer-ban, but you had 0 score. With your reputation; even if it was negatively voted, you likely have more than enough good answers to make such a ban nigh-on impossible, so it wouldn't affect you anyways.
Hopefully he'll see this thread and answer, but as it stands, don't worry about it.
The right thing to do when you edit an answer that was deleted - or you edit your answer and then find it deleted, as may well have happened here - is to flag the answer for un-deleting. You don't need to come to meta for this, and shouldn't. Think of it as a re-open vote for an answer.
You can also simply make a new answer, but I wouldn't do that unless your new answer is so different from the old one that there's no real relationship - ie, it won't look like you're just reposting the deleted answer.