At Luke 21:11, Jesus said that "great earthquakes" would also be a feature of the "sign of (his) presence". Here is a list of great earthquakes over the past 100 years.
Biggest earthquakes
(1) May 22, 1960 - Coast of southern Chile, magnitude 9.5, death toll: approximately 1,655 killed, 3,000 injured, 2 million homeless.
(2) March 28, 1964 - Prince William Sound, Alaska, magnitude 9.2, death toll: 113 killed in the resulting tsunami, 15 killed in the earthquake
(3) December 26, 2004 - Off the coast of northern Sumatra, magnitude 9.1, death toll: 227, 888 killed or missing and presumed dead, 1.7 million displaced by the earthquake and subsequent tsunami in 14 countries in South Asis and East Africa
(4) November 4, 1952, Kamchatka Peninsula, magnitude 9.0, death toll: Extensive property damage, but no lives lost.
(5) January 31, 1906, Off the Coast of Ecuador, Magnitude 8.8, Death toll: unknown.
(6) February 27, 2010, Off the coast in Maule, Chile, Magnitude 8.8, death toll: 802 as of March 3
(7) February 4, 1965, Rat Islands, Alaska, magnitude 8.7, death toll: No reported deaths or injuries.
(8) March 25, 2005, Northern Sumatra, magnitude 8.6, death toll: 1,400.
(9) August 15, 1950, Assam, India, and Tibet, magnitude 8.6, death toll: at least 780, but casualties from Tibet may not have been included.
(10) March 9, 1957, Andreaof Islands, Alaska, magnitude 8.6, death toll: no reported casualties, but extensive property damage
(11) September 12, 2007, Sothern Sumatra, magnitude 8.5, death toll: at least 25 killed, 161 injured, 52,522 buildings damaged or destroyed
(12) January 12, 2010, Port-au-Prince, Haiti, magnitude 7.0, death toll: 222,517, wounded 310,900, 1 million homeless, with many still unaccounted for.
Deadliest earthquakes
(1) July 27, 1976, Tangshan, China, magnitude 8.0, Official death toll: 255,000 killed, estimates as high as 855,000.
(2) December 26, 2004, Off the coast of Sumatra, magnitude 9.1, Death toll: 227, 888 killed or missing and presumed dead, 1.7 million displaced by the earthquake and subsequent tsunami in 14 countries in South Asis and East Africa
(3) January 12, 2010, Port-au-Prince, Haiti, magnitude 7.0, death toll: 222,517, wounded, 310,900, 1 million homeless, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs
(4) December 16, 1920, Haiyuan, China, magnitude 7.8, death toll: 200,000
(5) September 1, 1923, Kwanto, Japan, magnitude 7.9, death toll: 142, 800
(6) October 5, 1948, Ashgabat, Turkmenistan, magnitude 7.3, death toll: 110,000
(7) May 12, 2008, Eastern Sichuan, China, magnitude 8.7, death toll: 87, 587
(8) June 20, 1990, Western Iran, magnitude 7.4, death toll: 40,000 to 50,000
(9) October 8, 2005, Northern Pakistan, magnitude 7.6, death toll: 86,000
(10) December 12, 1908, Messina, Italy, magnitude 7.2, death toll: 72,000
(11) May 31, 1970, Chimbote, Peru, magnitude 7.9, death toll: 70,000