MCO3: “… the temperature at which the carbonate reaches a dissociation pressure of 1 atm CO2 is:
BeCO3, 250°, MgCO3 540°, CaCO3 900°, SrCO3 1289°, BaCO3 1360°.”
N. N. Greenwood, A. Earnshaw, Chemistry of the Elements 2nd ed. (1997) p 114.
I believe this is an example of a larger cation stabilizing a large anion (i.e., CO3^2-). A larger cation allows better contact with the carbonate ion and reduces repulsion between the anions. This results in ground-state stabilization to the activation energy needed to cause CO2 dissociation.