You just made me stop and think
The first SBIR frequency is a cancellation, but this is with a monopole design! With a monopole, the back wave is in phase with the forward wave. The reflection from the front wall is in-phase with the incident wave. By the time the reflection travels back to the speaker, half a period has passed, so it is now out-of-phase which results in a cancellation. With a dipole, the back wave is out-of-phase with the forward wave. So the first SBIR frequency should be reinforcement. You should be seeing a peak at 70Hz if you have your dipole placed 48" from the wall. Then again, I don't know enough about dipoles to know if dipoles behave as dipoles at long wavelengths, or whether they are omnis. As you can gather, what you see (if it is SBIR) depends on whether the rear wave is in-phase or out-of-phase with the forward wave.
I will need to defer to somebody more knowledgeable than me about this and humbly warn you that I might be in error. I am confident that my understanding of SBIR with monopoles is correct, not so confident about SBIR with dipoles. So i'll shout out to
@NTK and
@Duke.
Regardless, there is no practical benefit of knowing whether that cancellation at 94Hz is due to SBIR or a room mode, because either way the solution is the same. You can choose to ignore it (which is what I would do, because it is so narrow) or you can use another speaker or subwoofer to fill it. I for one, acknowledge that tilting at windmills is fun and you learn a heck of a lot in the process. So get yourself a horse and a lance and go for it!