EDMONTON — It had feathers and looked as if it were part penguin, part duck and part swan. It was between the size of a chicken and a turkey and ate the same sorts of things in the same sorts of places as a heron. But it was a dinosaur.

"This is kind of a bizarre one," said University of Alberta paleontologist Philip Currie, who introduced his new feathered friend Wednesday in the journal Nature. Halszkaraptor escuilliei (let's call it Halzie) is a member of the same dinosaur family as the famous raptors from "Jurassic Park," but wouldn't have been chasing any human-sized prey through the wetlands and swamps of the late Cretaceous era. "This guy is a lot smaller and a lot more birdlike," said Currie. But it's Halzie's anatomy, not its movie possibilities, that make it so interesting.

THE CANADIAN THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO- University of Alberta A feathered dinsoaur named Halszkaraptor escuilliei is shown in a handout illustration from the University of Alberta.

Like all members of the dinosaur raptor family, Halzie stood upright on its hind legs with a foot featuring a long, elevated claw, but leaned forward like a short-tailed bird. Its neck was huge — about half of its total length. "It would be a perfect neck for an animal that was wading in the water and, if something went by, it would strike with its sharp little beak," Currie said. Halzie's short little arms seemed to be adapted to swimming, with flat, thin-walled bones and hands with an elongated outside finger, much like those seen in the feet of other aquatic dinosaurs. "It sure looks like it's a swimming appendage of some kind," said Currie. "It's certainly doing something different. "We have other dinosaurs that are adapted to living in the water, but they tend to look more like crocodiles."

Lukas Panzarin via AP This illustration provided by Lukas Panzarin, with Andrea Cau for scientific supervision, shows a Halszkaraptor escuilliei dinosaur.

Halszkaraptor originally hails from a site in Mongolia that Currie and his colleagues had been excavating for years. But that's not where they found it. It had been poached from its original bed and a French colleague spotted the dinosaur in a warehouse in Europe, where it was waiting to be shipped to a retail outlet. That colleague alerted Currie. He had the fossil, encased in one solid block, examined minutely using a high-energy synchrotron beam. That was mostly to ensure the poachers hadn't altered it, but revealed all kinds of details that wouldn't have normally been apparent. It turned out, for example, that Halzie had 112 teeth — "amazing for such a small animal."

Paul Tafforeau/ESRF via AP This image provided by the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility shows a view from a 3D rendering of the Halszkaraptor escuilliei dinosaur fossil computed from data obtained at the ESRF in Grenoble, France.